Tag Archives: Corning Glass Works

Four-Month Canal Journey Climaxes at Watkins Glen

Darn that busybody DeWitt Clinton! His Erie Canal was one of the most spectacular successes of the age, but it was a disaster for the Southern Tier.

*Up until then the Chemung-Susquehanna River system was the great highway of western New York, with its connections to the Tidewater, Baltimore, and Chesapeake Bay. Bath, with its green squares and broad boulevards, was laid out to be the region’s great metropolis.

*That all slammed to a halt when the great canal opened in 1825. There were conventions and mob actions down here as crop prices and land values crashed instantly, leaving people with mortgages they could never pay off. The Land Office finally negotiated a revaluation.

*Meanwhile, little no-account shanty towns like Buffalo, Syracuse, and Rochester started to boom.

*Things improved for us when the Crooked Lake Canal opened in 1831, making Hammondsport a true port and putting Steuben-area farmers back into the game with a connection to the Erie system. Two years later Chemung Canal opened, eventually linking Corning and Elmira with Watkins Glen and Seneca Lake.

*All of that helped, but completion of the Erie Railroad in 1851 linked the Southern Tier with New York, Lake Erie, and Rochester. At that point, business truly started to revive.

*By 1868 those railroads had caught the attention of officials at the Brooklyn Flint Glass Works. The Erie gave Corning a major east-west mainline, and a major branch up to Rochester. The Fall Brook brought up coal, wood, sand, and charcoal from Pennsylvania. Raw materials could come in by rail, and finished products go out, and many costs were lower than they would be in Brooklyn. Corning could be a VERY attractive spot for relocation, and the decision was soon made.

*But while the railroads were a major consideration, another key factor was the canal. The Glass Works would lose some time, but save a good deal of money, shipping their factory equipment by canal.

*Barges loaded up at Brooklyn were towed up the Hudson to Albany, then transitioned into the Erie Canal as far as Montezuma, and junction with the Cayuga and Seneca Canal. Thence they made their way to Geneva and up Seneca Lake to Watkins, into the Chemung Canal, then a few rods on the Chemung River itself to Monkey Run and their new home along the waterfront of the Southside… just where so many of us recall the Glass Works always being.

*And that was in 1868 – exactly 150 years ago! Brooklyn Flint Glass Works became Corning Flint Glass Works, then Corning Glass Works, the Corning Incorporated (but still CGW on the stock exchange).

*To celebrate the sesquicentennial, GlassBarge (from Corning Musuem of Glass) and canal schooner Lois McClure (from Lake Champlain Maritime Museum) set out from Brooklyn back in May, accompanied by 1930 tug W. O. Ecker and 1964 tug C. L. Churchill. Like their predecessors they traveled up to Albany, but this time went the enture length of the Erie Canal to Buffalo, before reversing course to pick up the Cayuga-Seneca Canal, heading for Geneva, Seneca Lake, and Watkins Glen – as far as you can get, nowadays, by barge – to complete their odyssey.

*Art Cohn of Lake Champlain Maritime Museum observes that the new company’s arrival by a line of barges apparently didn’t attract much attention in Corning, though of course we now know that it was a historical thunderbolt. But this year’s little flotilla should get more notice as it opens to the public, at Watkins, from 11 to 6 on Friday through Sunday, September 14-16. I wouldn’t miss it. Maybe I’ll see you there.

Our World — A Hundred Years Ago

Germany rolled the dice in 1917, accepting war with America by an aggressive unrestricted u-boat campaign that sank anything approaching the British Isles in hopes of starving Britain before America could get organized to fight. When the Germans also used American facilities to send a coded message to Mexico urging war against the U.S., the roof caved in. America was in the Great War.

We’d had three years to get ready, and hadn’t done much of anything. A “Home Guard” quickly formed to protect Corning from attack, and almost as quickly faded away. (The county paid for their shoes and uniforms.) A draft was soon in effect. The Curtiss plant in Hammondsport worked around the clock; when people came over the hill from Bath, they could hear the aircraft engines roaring in their test stands near the Glen.

Thousands of prospective pilots started training on Curtiss Jennys, mostly made in Buffalo. Willys-Morrow in Elmira became a Curtiss subcontractor (making engines), and did Fay & Bowen in Geneva (making seaplane hulls). Katherine Stinson, flying a custom-made Curtiss biplane, set the American distance record at 606 miles. Corning Glass Works produced tons of laboratory glass, formerly made almost exclusively in Germany.

America bought the Danish Virgin Islands, and made Puerto Ricans U.S. citizens. An early spring revolution in Russia toppled the Czar, while an early winter revolution brought Lenin’s communists to power. Three children reported visions of the Virgin Mary at Fatima. Exhausted French soldiers began a series of mutinies. Lawrence of Arabia captured Aqaba. The first Pulitzer Prizes were announced. Lions Club was formed. Race riots in East Saint Louis killed perhaps a hundred or more people.

Mata Hari was executed. Arthur Balfour declared that the British “look with favor” on the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. The U.S. made brutal attacks on people suspected of not fully supporting the war. Germania Winery near Hammondsport changed its name to Jermania. On November 14, prison guards attacked and tortured 33 suffragettes in Virginia. Clemenceau, “the Tiger of France,” became his country’s premiere and announced his policy: “I make war.”

The National Hockey League was formed. Allenby took Jerusalem. In Halifax, the biggest man-made explosion until the atomic bomb killed 2000 people.

New York voters finally approved a constitutional amendment providing for women’s suffrage (Steuben, Chemung, Schuyler, and Yates Counties each voted against.) New York women started voting two years ahead of the national amendment.

Folks in Wheeler and in Mossy Glen (South Corning) formed Granges for themselves — the Wheeler Grange is still in operation.

Buffalo Bill died, along with Admiral Dewey and Count von Zeppelin. So did Scott Joplin, Edgar Degas, Auguste Rodin, and Mother Cabrini.

Births for 1917 included Zsa Zsa Gabor, Desi Arnaz, Ernest Borgnine, Cyrus Vance, Hans Conried, Ella Fitzgerald, Raymond Burr, Dean Martin, Lena Horne, Andrew Wyeth, Phyllis Diller, Robert Mitchum, Jack Kirby, John F. Kennedy, and Man o’ War.

By the way, 1917 marks the last year that the western world stumbled along with two calendars. The Bolsheviks, eager to modernize Russia, quickly ditched the obsolete Julian calendar and joined the rest of the west in Gregorian dates.

Three Ordinary Lifetimes: High Schools, Unions, Bibles… and the Ku Klux Klan

Last week we looked at the fact that three lifetimes… just ordinary lifetimes of 75 years each – would take us back to 1790 and George Washington’s first full year as President. And we looked at what a person born on that day would have experienced, as he or she lived from the beginning of Washington’s first term to the end of Lincoln’s.
Now imagine with us a second child, born on this day in 1865, on the 75th birthday of the one we looked at first.
On this day in 1865 people were feeling the wondering realization that the end of the Civil War was in sight. Local men with Grant were, as they had been for months, hammering away at Petersburg, the key to Richmond and Lee’s dwindling army. Local men with Sherman, having already marched from Atlanta to the sea and captured Savannah at the end of it, were kicking off for a northward drive into the Carolina’s, chasing Johnston’s also-dwindling army.
In March Lincoln was re-inaugurated, promising malice toward none, and charity to all. Listening in the crowd was an infuriated John Wilkes Booth, who was in love with malice but a stranger to charity.
In April Grant broke through the defenses of Petersburg, sending Davis’s government and Lee’s both army on the run. Grant cornered Lee a week later, and captured his entire army. Lincoln remarked in an impromptu speech that maybe “some” of the black soldiers should be allowed to vote. Booth, again lurking nearby, gave in completely to rage. Just days later he finally took up arms for the Confederacy, shooting a middle-aged man from behind in the dark. With telegraph lines limited, many local towns didn’t get the news for days.
Over the next couple of months the remaining Confederate armies tossed in the towel, and the boys came marching home. Released soldiers in Bath got drunk and embarked on a race riot, attacking black people on the perverse “logic” that they had been “responsible” for the war.
Two years later, after lengthy debate, Bath integrated its schools.
The year after that, Brooklyn Flint Glass Works moved to Corning. Good rail connections let them move product out, but a one-track shortline, moving coal, wood, and sand up from Pennsylvania, sealed the deal.
Out along the lakes, grape and wine production grew feverishly.
Laws and Congressional amendments established African Americans as citizens and protected their rights, but most northern whites turned their backs and allowed white southerners to mount what boiled down to a race war.
As we hit our nation’s centennial in 1876, both the nation and the region were becoming more industrial. Our local cities of Corning, Hornell, Geneva, Canandaigua, and Ithaca were incorporated during this period. Ithaca, of course, also boomed with the new land-grant college system.
Local farm families formed Granges for mutual support and encouragement. Built-up areas started providing themselves with water, phone, and electric systems, though electricity was often part-time. Electric trolleys appeared, but would be gone within fifty years or so.
When George Armstrong Custer led his men into annihilation at the Little Big Horn, Bath men named their Union veterans post in his honor.
In 1879 New York opened its State Soldiers and Sailors Home in Bath, “to care for him who shall have borne the battle,” in Lincoln’s words. A great many local communities formed public libraries.
In 1872, most Corning businesses gave their employees the day off for Christmas. But for many workers, December 25th and the 4th of July were work days well into the new century. In 1890, firings at Corning Glass Works led to 200 men and boys walking out, and the start of a long unionization struggle.
Christian Science appeared during this period, along with the Jehovah’s Witness and Pentecostal movements. The first new English Bible appeared since 1611.
Niagara Falls became America’s first state park. Watkins Glen followed some years later.
Even small towns across the region opened high schools, or paid to send their kids to school.
In 1876 AND in 1888, our ridiculous electoral college system torpedoed us again. In both cases the voters chose a president… and the electors seated the guy who lost.
Two presidents — Garfield and McKinley — were assassinated.
In 1894 New York voters approved the Constitutional provision that state forest lands ‘be forever kept as wild.” In 1901 President Theodore Roosevelt established he first National Wildlife Refuge.
We had a war to free Cuba, during which we grabbed Hawaii, Wake, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines, besides setting up our own puppet government in Havana.
As the new century dawned, internal combustion became a force in the land. Nowhere locally was this more evident than in Hammondsport, where factories for motorcycles, blimps, and even airplanes – not to mention the engines themselves – sprang up. The spark plug for all this combustion was of course Glenn Curtiss, who made millions on the First World War.
That war left more empty seats around the table, meanwhile vaulting America into world prominence. The Spanish Influenza rushed in as the war neared its end, killing millions. Hundreds died locally.
The “Great Migration” was in full swing, as African Americans freed themselves from the south much as Jews would soon flee Germany.
Prohibition clobbered the economy of the Finger Lakes, which tried to make it up by paving the roads and promoting tourism. The Finger Lakes Tourism Alliance came to be.
As Catholic city-dweller Al Smith rose to prominence, hysterical rural folks formed Ku Klux Klan chapters. State headquarters were in Binghamton, and Yates County Fairground was a favored site for rallies. African Americans from Bath took the lead in fighting the Klan, which dwindled considerably (but did not vcanish) by the 1930s.
Franklin D. Roosevelt contracted polio in 1921. In 1928 he ran for governor, barnstorming every county by auto caravan, proclaiming his progressive record and asking delighted crowds, “Do I look sick to you?”
Across the country what looked like a boom proved to be a bubble, and the world plunged into a Depression that some economists compared to the Dark Ages. Hammondsport was one of many communities that helped sweep Roosevelt into the White House. He’d promised to end Prohibition, and did, and they immediately went back to voting Republican.
In one year of Depression Steuben County aided something like 5000 homeless people in transient camps and bureaus, and 3000 in the poorhouse. Public works from Washington and Albany helped. These included Glenn Curtiss Memorial School, Dansville High School, Painted Post post office, Stony Brook State Park, and Watkins Glen State Park. Civilian Conservation Corps worked on the parks and on soil conservation. After the catastrophic 1935 flood, which killed far more people than the 1972 flood, work got under way on Almond and Arkport dams.
As his second term neared its end in 1940, F.D.R. was desperate to retire and concentrate on his physical therapy, which bode fair to vastly improve his mobility. But Hitler had invaded Poland just months earlier, while Japan had been savaging China for a decade. With war at the door and depression still snapping at our heels, a soft-spoken sentiment grew slowly but steadily louder – we want Roosevelt again.

Travel and Tourism — New Deal Style

New Deal work programs built the Glenn Curtiss Memorial School, the Painted Post post office, the Arkport dam.  Civilian Conservation Corps crews developed Stony Brook State Park, and created soil conservation projects.
But also part of the New Deal were the Federal Artists Project (which created the post office mural in Painted Post) and the Federal Writers Project.
One notable accomplishment of the Writers Project was creation of lengthy hardcover travel guides for each state.  This gave the writers work, but it was also aimed to stimulate tourism business, and with it gasoline sales… not to mention work for printers, and revenue for booksellers.
The New York State guide describes power boating on Keuka Lake and the wineries, which “grow more famous each year,” at Hammondsport, besides including a photo of a champagne cellar at Rheims.
That’s all in the overview, but then the guide suggests numerous auto routes you can take on your own through the Empire State.  Four of them pass through Steuben.

One tour goes from Elmira to Olean, on what was then State Route 17.  The guide suggests visiting Corning and the Corning Glass Works, emphasizing this advice with a photo of a glass blower and another of the 200” disc (miniature discs sold as souvenirs).  The showrooms are open to the public, and the plant by appointment.  The Glass Works are famous for Pyrex, glass fibres (shades of the future!), and the “very fine decorative glassware” at the Steuben Division.
Your route then takes you to Painted Post, where people are largely employed by foundries, machine shops, and Ingersoll-Rand, and then through Erwin (a hamlet) and Jasper, where you find the junction with State Route 21.  That’s the end of the Steuben descriptions on this route.

A Penn Yan-Hammondsport-Bath tour runs along State Route 54, but this is primarily what we call 54A, the West Lake Road.  After working around Bluff Point and through Branchport, then heading south, the guide points out Keuka Lake’s connections with aviation history, pointing out Glenn Curtiss and his accomplishments.  Hammondsport “is proud of the title, ‘Cradle of  American Aviation.’”  The tour then passes Stony Brook Farm, mentioning Curtiss’s flights there, especially the July 4 June Bug flight in 1908.
Hammondsport, of course, is also “a center of the New York State champagne industry,” and the next feature along the route is Pleasant Valley Wine Company.  The guide treats us to a lengthy description of the champagne process before sending us by the Fish Hatchery and down to Bath, where the tour ends at the junction with U.S. Route 15.

A Pulteneyville-Naples-Hornell-state line tour enters Steuben at Wayland, the northern junction with U.S. 15.  It proceeds to Hornell, a town “made” by the Erie Railroad and then the home of 27-acre Elim Bible School, which the writers apparently considered a significant attraction all by itself.  “Outsiders come to watch the camp meetings….  The worshippers, sitting around in a circle, listen to the music of a three-piece orchestra, maintaining an unbroken posture for hours at a stretch with no outward sign of physical discomfort; here and there one rises, raises his eyes heavenward, and chants hymn fragments; then, eyes partly closed, mumbling as in a trance, several throw their arms above their heads, cry out, and roll on the ground in the hysteria of emotion; all become convulsed with joy, and even the onlookers take the contagion and smile at one another with unaccustomed cordiality.”
After giving some history on George Hornell and Benjamin Crosby, the guide directs us on through Canisteo (stopping for the tale of Kanisteo Castle in colonial days) to Jasper, where the Steuben information again ends at the junction with State 15.

Lastly there’s a Rochester-Bath-Painted Post-Lawrenceville tour.  This also enters the county at Wayland, the junction with State 21 and a stopping place on the old Elmira-Buffalo stagecoach route.  Once the Erie railroad came in, “German immigrants settled here and gave the place a reputation for hard work and thrift,” making Steuben “one of the greatest potato-growing counties in the country.”  Waylanders also raise peas, corn, and beans, besides operating chair and silk factories.
The route then takes you to Stony Brook Park, where a 25-cent parking fee will gain you access to 560 acres of rough, rocky country, then being improved by a federal work relief project.
On your way to Avoca (which we only skirt) you cross the site of a U.S. Soil Service soil erosion project, put into effect after the horrible 1935 flood.  Avocans, we are told, manufacture brooms, hockey sticks, spools, reels, and potato graders.  The writers also pass on the story of the farmer who discouraged theft of his firewood by adding in a little gunpowder.
Then you come to the rich farming area of Bath, where busy workers make saddlery, ladders, and knit goods.  Pulteney Square, we’re assured, is lined with business blocks and buff-colored county buildings.  After a few Charles Williamson stories we’re off to Painted Post, the junction with State Route 17 and the last mention of Steuben County.