The Dyken Pond Environmental Education Center announces that scholarships are available for children aged 6 through 9 to attend a one week nature camp. The “Summer Outdoor Learning Adventure” is held from 9 am until 3 pm, with after care hours available. Children spend the entire day outdoors learning about nature and having fun. Each day is spent hiking, exploring and discovering things about the natural world around us. The scholarship covers the full cost of the one week session. Paid registrations are also still being accepted. Please visit our website at www.dykenpond.org or contact the Center at dykenpond@fairpoint.net or 518-658-2055 for an application and more information.
The Life Of George Holcomb – A Death From A Wagon Accident
Thursday October 25, 1827: Today my wife took the wagon and rode to Hancock to Rodman Hazard’s. On this day cold and some snowy. This morning Mr. Wm Haskett went to Lebanon to shoemaking and took the leather to make Samuel a pair of shoes and mend mine towards his board and we reckoned for his board up to now, which was three dol and reckoned with his wife for her work up to now, which was ten weeks work for spinning, washing, and milking at 62 cts per week excepting one week’s pay in apples at eight cts per bushel that week. She dried apples for us that she has her pay in apples and the rest of the time she washes one day in a week and milks for her board.
Sunday: Today I took the single wagon and carried my wife and sister Eleanor to Elder Jones meeting house to the funeral of old Mr. Jeremiah Landon and said Jones preached. On the way home we were stopped at Calvin Carpenter’s to see the sight of Benj Carpenter’s son Henry that was hurt by a horse running away and turning the wagon over. He was badly jammed.
Thursday, November 1: This morning I told Mr. John Russel that I had a pile of wood to the school house and that wood I should not make use of there as he was going to work round said school house. I told him not to meddle with it nor let no one else, but as near as I can find out he and others cut up my wood and put it into said school house and put a lock on the door, all this for what purpose I know not.
Wednesday, November 7: Today quite stormy, snow and rain. This morning Henry Carpenter died with the wound from falling from the wagon on Sunday the 28th of last month. Said boy had his skull broken in and Doctor Batcheler trapanned him. He was wounded mortally otherwheres about the head.
Thursday: Today I took the single wagon and carried my wife and Mother Holcomb and Miriam Newton to the funeral of Henry Carpenter, the son of Benj Carpenter. A sermon was preached by Elder Jones at the Seventh Day meeting house.
Friday: I carried my children to school and I chopped and knocked up old wood in my wood on the hill, and I took on a load onto my horse sled and broke down in the woods, and I took off the horses and came home. This evening, tonight my son George P was quite restless with a stoppage on the lung.
Saturday: I began to help brother Wm kill hogs, but I was called home and went after Doctor Graves. Tonight I sat up with my son George Pease, he continued quite sick, a stoppage in the stomach.
Sunday: Tonight my son quite restless, I went to Doctor Graves and I got more medicine, for he continues distressed at the stomach.
Monday, November 16: Today I carried my children to school and we laid up rail fence round the orchard and turned our swine into said orchard and we took Wm’s ox team and got down the broken sled and two loads of wood, and at night I took the wagon and rode over to Doctor Graves’ and got more medicine for my child, but we did not give it tonight, for the child was a little better.
Columbia County DA Declines To Prosecute SAFE Act Violation
by David Flint
In New Lebanon Town Court on May 23 the Columbia County District Attorney Paul Czajka declined to prosecute a charge of violating New York’s new Secure Ammunition and Firearms Enforcement Act, known as the SAFE Act. Czajka told Judge Jessica Byrne he was not making any “blanket policy” but having reviewed the file and discussed the charges and surrounding circumstances with the arresting State Troopers, he had decided to “decline to prosecute the unlawful possession of the ammunition feeding device.”
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Tops Friendly Markets Grand Re-Opening
by Bea Peterson
The former Grand Union in Hoosick Falls reopened on Tuesday, May 28, as Tops Friendly Markets. Tops, with markets in upstate New York, northern Pennsylvania and western Vermont, purchased 21 Grand Union stores in July 2012. The company has been making changes in each store to gradually transform them into Tops Markets. On Tuesday stores in Greenville, Hancock, Stamford, West Coxsackie and Tannersville, NY, held Grand Re-Opening celebrations similar to the one here.
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Two Stephentown Vets Nominated For Hall Of Fame
by David Flint
At a ceremony at the Half Moon Town Hall on May 14 State Senator Kathleen Marchione recognized the service of 14 veterans from around the 43rd State Senate District. The occasion was to announce the Senator’s choice for induction into the New York State Senate Veterans Hall of Fame. Nominated to represent the Veterans of Stephentown were World War II veterans Vincent Devlin and Franklyn Mooney.
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Hoosick Falls Remembers The Fallen On Memorial Day
by Bea Peterson
The weather on Memorial Day was perfect. Perfect for marching or watching a parade. Perfect for remembering. The route of the Center building, which is dedicated to veterans of World War II. There the parade pauses to remember. [Read more…] about Hoosick Falls Remembers The Fallen On Memorial Day
Memorial Day Parade In Berlin
Hoosick Remembers
by Bea Peterson
On Sunday evening, May 26, the rain finally stopped and sunlight brightened the sky. Cemetery trustees and event organizers Janice Cipperly and Carol MacDonald welcomed everyone to the fifth annual memorial event. [Read more…] about Hoosick Remembers
BCS Watching The Grass Grow
by Thaddeus Flint
Residents in the Berlin School District might notice this month that their abandoned schools in Stephentown and Grafton are looking, well, a bit more abandoned. The quick assumption might be that someone isn’t doing their job or that there is no money to mow the lawns at those buildings. Those assumptions, however, are far too simplistic for BCS, where just getting a lawn mowed is done by committee, or in the case of the Berlin School Board at the monthly meeting May 22, not done at all.
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Grafton Planning Board Action – Land For Kids
by Kieron Kramer
The Grafton Planning Board met on Monday, May 20, and accepted the applications for two subdivisions, both on Edelmann Lane near the town line with Pittstown. One was the major subdivision of property owned by Clark Edelmann and his sister MaryLou MacNaughton into five parcels. The other was a three lot minor subdivision of the old Harbinger estate by Lawrence “Jamie” Meracle, Jr. [Read more…] about Grafton Planning Board Action – Land For Kids





