Tag Archives: Hornell Intermediate School

2022 — a Double Handful of Anniversaries

Anniversaries! Why do they matter?
Well, actually, they don’t, when you come right down to it. A hundred years isn’t any more important than eighty years… or for that matter, than thirty-nine years and six months.
Still, human beings constantly thirst for patterns, which can help keep us alive. And we’re tuned to the cyclical pilgrimage of the years, with ever-returning spring and her sisters greeting us in the same pattern, all through our lives.
Anniversaries matter to us. They can be an occasion to remember, observe, and (depending on the type of event), celebrate. And 2022 offers repeated possibilities.
First of all, the TOWN OF URBANA has its bicentennial this year. It was created in 1822 from territory belonging to Bath, and incorporated as its own municipality.
Look at a map, and Urbana is the fist that grips the upright of Keuka Lake’s slingshot. Some of the very earliest grapes in the Finger Lakes region were cultivated in Urbana, and Pleasant Valley Wine Company, formed before the Civil War, is still in business today. Urbana’s lakeside slopes make good ground for vineyards.
Though the Town’s mostly rural, there are unincorporated settlements such as Rheims, Pleasant Valley, Urbana, and North Urbana (which is southwest of Urbana – go figure). The Fish Hatchery and the Davenport Hospital are in Urbana, but the best known part of Urbana is probably the Village of Hammondsport, which was indeed a port back in canal-and-railroad days. It’s also, of course, the home of Urbana’s most famous son, the aviation giant Glenn Curtiss, who lies buried just a few miles from where he was born, and just a few rods from where his first flights electrified the nation.
Also incorporated in 1822 was the Town of Cameron, far from the Lake and high on the Appalachian Plateau. Cameron is the birthplace of General William Woods Averell, whose Civil War career was followed by a life of diplomacy, invention and enterprise – he invented an early form of asphalt for roads. Cameron and West Cameron (but not Cameron Mills) are unincorporated settlements. The land was originally separated from Addison.
Centenary Methodist Church in Bath is enjoying its bicentennial this year, though Methodists had been meeting informally before that. It took them a few years to get their building up, but once they did they shared it with any congregation, such as the Baptists and the African Methodist Episcopal Zion, in need of a home. They are now on their third edifice, and are currently hosting the Seventh Day Adventists.
This year Avoca Baptist Church enjoys its 175th anniversary. There’s also a sad 175th to acknowledge. On November 30 of 1847 Marcus and Narcissa Prentiss were killed in Oregon Territory. Later on we’ll look at the ins and outs, and rights and wrongs, of that affair (watch this space!). But for now we’ll just note that Narcissa Prentiss was a Prattsburgher, an alumna of Franklin Academy, while her husband Marcus had practiced medicine in Prattsburgh and Wheeler, before they went to Oregon Territory as missionaries.
Hornell Intermediate School was opened in 1922 as Hornell High School. It was perhaps the first of our truly modern schools, and it’s the oldest school in Steuben County that started as a public school, and is still used as a public school.
This is the centennial year for the Village of Riverside, incorporated within the Town of Corning in 1922. Earlier called Centerville, the new Village gave itself a new name. Unfortunately at some times Riverside could have been called River-In or River-Under. The Village was badly flooded in 1935, 1946, and 1972.
Which reminds us that this year marks the fiftieth anniversary of Aniello’s Pizzeria in Corning, on June 22, 1972 – and then of the Hurricane Agnes flood on June 23. It’s certainly not an occasion to celebrate – it killed 19 people in Steuben alone – but it must be remembered. And we’ll do so soon, in more detail, in another edition of this blog.