Tag Archives: New Deal

A “New Deal” Driving Tour

Sometimes as you travel around you like to have a theme to guide, or at least punctuate, your wandering. Churches – town halls – parks. How many can you spot? What can you learn about them?
“New Deal” construction, designed to put the unemployed to work during the Great Depression, was vital not just to turning the tide in the 1930s, but to boosting the economic boom of the 1950s. You may pass some of these every day, but not realize that they ARE from the New Deal. So here’s a little local cheat sheet.
School construction boomed in those years. We are still using New Deal schools in Avoca, Arkport, Dryden, Ovid, Interlaken, Canisteo, and Troupsburg, not to mention the Cuba, Jasper and Prattsburgh schools, which all got major expansions or renovations. Cohocton school has an octagonal tower, hinting at Cohocton’s Orson Squire Fowler, who popularized the octagon house. These schools are now almost 90 years old, so it’s both amazing and delightful that they’re still plugging away, doing their jobs! Bear in mind, though, that all of these schools have been expanded and altered since the 1930s – we’re not seeing them now as they were when new.
Howard school (now used for business) is in private hands, and so is Curtiss Memorial School, with its stunning Art Deco front, in Hammondsport.
Modern bridges seem to have been a New Deal priority – we weren’t in horse and buggy days any more! Clinton Street Bridge in Binghamton has an Art Deco design. Corning’s Chemung River Bridge (on Bridge Street) was the biggest New Deal project in the city. Bath V.A. got a sorely-needed new bridge too, plus a hospital and a nursing facility, all of them replacing predecessors from back as far as the 1870s, and all of them still in use.
Bath proper also got a new wing to join separate buildings at the old Bath Memorial Hospital (now Pro Action) on Steuben Street. (Republican U.S. Representative Sterling Cole made sure his district got good projects from the Democratic president!)
Like the V.A., post offices were federal facilities, so post office projects could be arranged pretty quickly. Remember how much of the nation’s business used to be carried on by mail? Modern post offices sped things up, and they appeared in Painted Post, Honeoye Falls, Waverly, and Watkins Glen. Geneva, Newark, Canandaigua and Cortland* post offices all got significant additions. The 1939 Horseheads post office is now home for Community Foundation of Elmira-Corning and the Finger Lakes.
Folks who thought that the government should not be spending money on such projects got REALLY riled up about paying for artwork! But artists had to eat too, so several of these post offices got murals. Painted Post has “Recording the Victory,” in which Native Americans celebrate having captured Revolutionary War soldiers. This painting was damaged in the 1972 flood, and afterward restored. Honeoye Falls has a more peaceful agricultural scene, “The Life of the Seneca.” Waverly’s mural is about the early days of White inhabitation. Geneva’s post office has a mural inside, and a set of five bas reliefs outside! Cortland has a striking and unusual wooden relief artwork, “The Valley of the Seven Hills.”
If you like the art side of things, you MUST visit the world’s largest collection of New Deal art, at Livingston County New Deal Gallery in Mount Morris. About 10% of the collection is on exhibit at any time.
There’s plenty more stuff around, as you can see by www.livingnewdeal.org. Much of the work was in tree planting, storm sewers, guard rails, and such, but what we’ve listed here are all easily findable, and visually interesting.
Two words of warning! First, folks get understandably antsy when they see people hanging around the school. Take a look, check it off on your list, and move on – if you want to take photos, go on Sunday.
Second, as far as I can tell it’s not permitted to photograph the post office murals. This is supposed to be a “homeland security” thing, which I suppose is actually not about the murals, but about photographing the interiors of federal buildings. If you want a picture ask, but be prepared to be turned down. Apart from those caveats, hit the road! And have a good time! “Happy days are here again!”

Two Centuries of Building Schools

We read that Painted Post had a school before it had streets. Public schools (and later public libraries) were precious to the hearts of New Englanders and northeasterners in our country’s earliest days. Massachusetts required towns to maintain schools back in the 1640s, lest “that old deluder Satan” ensnare people through ignorance. They had established Harvard in 1636, and a printing press two years later. John Eliot devised the “Massachusett” tongue into writing, and by 1663 was publishing Bibles (Up-Biblum God). Not just migration and culture, but the Northwest Ordinance, enacted by Congress in the 1780s, required public schools north of the Ohio and east of the Mississippi.

As I look at things, it seems to me that there have been six or seven main waves of school construction here in our area.

The first, starting around 1800, is the wave of one-room schools. Some of these would operate for about 150 years. At the height there were pushing 400 such schools in Steuben County, and Town of Bath alone had 25. That seems like a lot until you remember that they had to be spaced so that small children could walk there.

In these schools one teacher would instruct all levels, while striving to keep order among those who were not directly engaged. Cooktown School in Bath (now Head Start) is the oldest local school building still used as a school. The school in Hornby Forks is a museum, while Steuben County Fair and Heritage Village of the Finger Lakes have one-room schools where they welcome visitors and conduct sample classes.

Approaching and following the Civil War we get the “academies” – essentially private schools offering a higher level of education, especially including college preparation, that the one-room schools couldn’t manage. Prattsburgh, Hammondsport, Naples, and Penn Yan all had such schools.

As the new century approached we began to see union schools, graded schools, and public high schools… sometimes by taking over the academies, as happened in Prattsburgh and Hammondsport. New schools went up in Bath, Howard, Greenwood. Cohocton, North Cohocton, Bradford, and many other local communities.

After the Great War, it was clear that even the newest of these schools couldn’t prepare children for life in the 20th century. New York State financially supported centralized schools, and modern new buildings went up in Savona, Campbell, Addison, Woodhull, Jasper, Bradford, Corning Northside, Bath, and Painted Post. Prattsburgh got a new school too, after the old academy burned down. It’s still in use a century later, along with the Savona, Campbell, and Addison schools. The Bradford and Northside schools are gone, but the others are still standing, though now put to other use.

You’d think that the Great Depression would have put school construction on hold, but Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal moved millions of families from relief rolls to payrolls by supporting new construction. Cutting-edge schools rose in Hammondsport (where they even had television, in 1936), Avoca, Arkport, Howard, Cohocton, Canisteo, probably Troupsburg, and possibly Greenwood. (All still exist, all except Hammondsport, Howard, and Greenwood are still schools.) Bradford got an addition, while Prattsburgh (still in use) got an addition AND a renovation.

With these marvelous new schools of the 20s and 30s, communities and educators might have felt that they’d finally “arrived.” But they hadn’t reckoned with the Baby Boom growth of school-age population, OR the lightning-fast advances in technology. By the 1950s new schools were going up in Corning, Painted Post, Hammondsport, Bath, and Wayland, though they often kept the older schools still in use. By 1961, the one-room schools were all gone.

And it still doesn’t stop – Bath and Bradford have built new since the Baby Boom, while others have added on. With many of our schools now a hundred years old, no doubt we’ll see some of them replaced as time goes on. But we owe a round of applause for our ancestors – going back to the 1630s – who built and sacrificed for times and generations far beyond what they could imagine.

We’re Still Using New Deal Construction

A couple of weeks ago, we looked a little at how local folks experienced the Great Depression of roughly 1929-1941. It was a nightmare, but all our efforts to get OUT of the Depression left a very positive mark on our country, and on us locally.

When New York Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt became president in 1933, he threw himself into “the New Deal,” hoping to soften the Depression and build a better future. Social Security was a New Deal program. So was repeal of Prohibition, which put Keuka Lake grapegrowers, shippers, and winemakers back into business.

Putting people to work on construction became a hallmark of the New Deal – the government paid to have the old unused trolley tracks pulled up in Penn Yan.

More visible was work done right in the heart of our coverage area. Painted Post got a new post office, still in use today, with a mural in the lobby (artists need to eat, too). And we’re still crossing the Chemung River on Bridge Street… that bridge was the biggest New Deal project in Corning.

At Bath V.A., which the U.S. had only recently taken over from the state, many of the facilities went back to the 1870s. So one day in 1936 the last surviving Civil War resident wielded a shovel from his wheelchair to ceremonially begin construction of a new modern hospital, which is still in use today.

Roosevelt was a Democrat, but Republican U. S. Representative W. Sterling Cole made sure to secure the funds for the new hospital… AND a new nursing home care unit, AND a new entry bridge… all of them still in use. The V.A. also got reforesting, to the tune of a quarter million seedlings.

Sterling further arranged to vastly expand the Bath Memorial Hospital, now the Pro Action building on Steuben Street, with a new wing joining the two original buildings.

Hammondsport got a brand new school to replace the old Academy, much of which went back before the Civil War. The Glenn H. Curtiss Memorial School, built partly on the old Curtiss home grounds donated by Glenn’s widow, was a K-12 school. It was so cutting-edge that it actually had television when it opened in 1936. Curtiss School was used into the 21st century, and is now privately owned.

Franklin Academy in Prattsburgh also got a hand up. The original 19th-century building burned in 1923 and was replaced the following year. By 1935 it already needed updating, so Prattsburgh got a thorough renovation AND a substantial addition, giving birth to Prattsburgh Central School.

Prattsburgh found that the project was going to run way over the promised funding, so two men went to New York City to plead for more. The official there said he couldn’t do anything, but urged them to go to Washington. Their story of the needs of Prattsburgh’s people had brought tears to his eyes, he said, and a higher authority might be convinced to release more funds. Down they went, sharing a railroad berth to save expenses, and got the funds they needed. Another agency went even further, putting in a ball diamond and athletic fields. The 1935-36 work is still the heart of the school.

Kanona was home to a camp of Civilian Conservation Corps (C.C.C.) lads… older teens hired for a year of conservation-related work. C.C.C. created much of the infrastructure for Stony Brook State Park and Watkins Glen State Park, and after catastrophic flooding in 1935 the boys worked mightily on flood-control and soil-conservation projects. The Army Corps of Engineers built dams and Arkport and Almond, while Avoca, Corning, and Addison got improved flood barriers. Believe it or not, the 1972 flood could have been much worse than it was. Some of the thanks should go to Franklin D. Roosevelt.

“The Roosevelts”

Many folks locally and around the country have been dedicating evenings lately to “The Roosevelts: An Intimate History,” the new Ken Burns documentary series on PBS.
No question that Theodore, Franklin, and Eleanor among them shook the world. But before they were President, Franklin and Theodore were each governors of the Empire State. Before she was first lady of the world (in Harry Truman’s phrase), Eleanor Roosevelt was first lady of New York.
So some of their effect on us locally was direct and personal. There are persistent stories about Franklin stopping at one of the resorts on Keuka Lake, though I’ve never been able to verify them. We were also on the campaign hustings, a route which ran along the railroads in Theodore’s day. In 1898 he spoke to a large crowd at the Erie Depot in Corning, where T.G. Hawkes employees attended on company time. Two years later he was back in Corning, running for the vice-presidency.
When Theodore’s campaign train stopped at Cameron Mills, he spotted the milk station manager with his nine children on the loading dock. “This is the most prosperous place I have been to yet,” TR quipped (he only had six himself). I believe he also spoke at least once in Bath.
By the time Franklin ran for governor in 1928, auto was the way to go. Since his calamitous bout with polio seven years earlier, worries about his strength and health were pervasive. So he barnstormed every county in the state by car, starting in Middletown and running across the Southern Tier, then up along the lakeshore and down the Hudson to New York City. In one day he woke up at Elmira and raced to Olean (largely over dirt roads), speaking at both places – not to mention at Corning, Bath, and Hornell along the way. Besides blasting Republican leaders as “stupid,” and promising continued Progressivism and reform, Roosevelt jauntily asked every crowd, “Do I look sick to you?” and beamed as they shouted back their answer.
He won, of course, the grueling three-week campaign proving that he could do what even a fully healthy man would quail at, and smile the whole way.
While finding plenty of support in a union town like Hornell, out here in the west he was hampered by the hereditary Republicanism of many voters. Hammondsporters gave him their ballots for President in 1932, when he promised to repeal Prohibition. That accomplished, they went back to Alf Landon four years later.
Through the thirties many communities, including Corning, held balls on Franklin’s birthday to raise money for the fight against polio. On August 23, 1933, empowered by the new National Industrial Recovery Act, Corning Glass Workers finally got a union. This was apparently an idea whose time had come, since they voted 1650 to 113 in favor, with 180 abstentions.
A student once asked me if New Deal construction projects had been necessary. I replied that if you thought a dirt road was fine, with a bridge that could carry a horse and wagon, then they hadn’t been needed. But if you though that our bridges and highways should carry tractor-trailer trucks, that was a different story.
For some mystifying reason tradition describes New Deal jobs as do-nothing projects, and the workers as lazy bums who got paid for leaning on shovels. Some of the useless boondoggles accomplished by these bums include Hoover Dam; the Golden Gate Bridge; and LaGuardia Airport.
Locally we can thank the New Deal for Stony Brook Park; Dansville High School (now Genesee Community College); Glenn Curtiss Memorial School; the Painted Post post office – most of them still in use.
In the early 1930s a supervisor of the poor in Steuben County, while admitting that hundreds, if not thousands of desperate people were being helped by state and federal programs, grumped that these programs were making people lazy and dependent. These are the same people, of course, who fought through the Depression, won the Second World War, and built the biggest economic boom our country has ever enjoyed.
And they couldn’t have built that boom without the highways, harbors, bridges, airports, schools, post offices, and power systems of the New Deal. They couldn’t have bought their homes, or gotten their college educations, without Franklin’s G.I. Bill of Rights.
In 1996 Bob Dole campaigned for president, with the awkward task of running against peace and prosperity. One of his most memorable proposals was less meat inspection – an idea that stunningly failed to enthuse the public, who preferred living in Theodore Roosevelt’s world. On another question, after stumbling briefly, Dole finally told his questioners, look, this is America – we’re not going to let children go hungry… showing that he himself was living in Franklin’s world.
Every person who picks up a prescription, or buys a cold remedy, with confidence that they’ll be safe, is living in Theodore’s world. Every patient with pre-existing conditions who can now buy health insurance is living in Theodore’s world, for he campaigned on universal health care 110 years ago.
Every American who deposits money in a bank without worrying, or who gets a Social Security payment, or belongs to a union – or who buys a bottle of wine — is living in Franklin’s world. Every woman who thinks she should be able to think for herself, and plan her life without others confining her, is living in Eleanor’s world. Every African American who thinks he should have the same chances every other American has, is living in the world of the Roosevelts. Without their dreams, their ideals, their convictions, and their accomplishments, or lives would be very different.