Here is a wonderful treat for everyone! The Fifty-Fourth Reunion of the Alumni Association of Port Byron High School from 1926 is now available for free download. I have seen several little brochures for commencement services but this is the first that I have ever seen specifically for a reunion of our Alumni Association.
Click here to view and/or download the 1926 booklet
Welcome to the History Corner!
Celebrating the rich history of Port Byron, New York, an old Erie Canal village in the Town of Mentz. This site is dedicated to the legacy and heritage of our community as well as a variety of regional historical tidbits. I hope you enjoy your visit and will stop by again.
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
Friday, October 12, 2012
The Unknown Blue and Gray
Here's another powerful poem that I would like to share.
Date of publication not known.
The Unknown Blue and Gray
By
Wilbur D. Nesbet
There are unknown graves in the valleys
That the troops of war possessed,
Where the bugles sounded for rallies
But the bullets sang of rest;
And the mountains hold without number
Hidden graves from the war's mad days,
Where the unknown men have their slumber
In their shrouds of blue and gray.
And no drums will rumble and rattle,
And no fifes blow sharp and shrill
In the valleys that knew the battle,
Nor atop the lone high hill;
But the silent stars know the story
And the broad sky of the day
Bends and whispers low of their glory
To these men of blue and gray.
And no banners o'er them are waving,
No marchers come and pause
With cheers for the land of their saving
Or tears for their lost cause,
Yet the twilight stars intermingle
With the hues when ends the day.
And the striving flags now are single
O'er the men of blue and gray.
There are unknown graves in the thickets,
On the hillside and the plain,
Of the missing scouts and the pickets,
Yet they did not fall in vain.
Though their names may not be engraven
And their places in the fray,
In our hearts now each finds a haven
They who wore the blue and gray.
For the God of battles is kindly
With none of mankind's hate
That is cherished every too blindly
And these pawns of warfare's fate
Have their tombs of nature's splendor
Each set forth in proud array
Through an impulse holy and tender,
Though they wore the blue and gray.
Where once were the guns that wrangled
Sounds the peace song of the thrush,
And the roses and vines are tangled
In the solemn, sacred hush;
Where the cannon one day would hurtle
Their missiles in the fray
Grows the rue and the creeping myrtle
O'er the graves of the blue and gray.
They are nature's hand that are strewing
The flowers on each mound;
It is God's own beautiful doing
That each unknown grave is found
Where the cypress leaves are a quiver,
Where peaks lift through the day,
Where the forest sighs to the river
Of the unknown blue and gray.
Labels:
Local History,
Military,
National History
Wednesday, October 10, 2012
Things Don't Last Forever
Photo: EPA Public Profile |
The site suffered heavy metal contamination from the operations of the RN Hitchcock Electroplating business. It has been the home of many different businesses in its long 100+ year history.
The EPA has been working with allot of determination to try to clean and remove the contaminants so that the site could be established as a historic property with the Park Service.
Unfortunately fate has not cooperated with that goal. Recently there were several main support beams that have cracked, causing extensive damage. I visited the site for a tour with Michael Hoppe with the Response and Prevention Branch of the EPA on the evening of October 9th. It was a quick reminder that history alone can not save a structure.
While the damage is evident from the outside, it isn't until you go inside that your heart sinks. The fractured support beams has caused a significant shift to the South West corner of the building. The damages are beyond the resources to repair it.
If there is any glimmer in our situation, it is the documentation process that will be carried out to record as much as possible about the site before it is removed. This is an opportunity that would be lost if the structure were allowed to simply collapse. The project site will be recorded with various photos and reports about the old mill which will be made public record. I will record these materials on this blog for my readers as the information becomes available. I will also add a special section on the footer of this website with the various links. However, I wanted to share the information here so that readers will be aware that resources about the Green Street Mill will appear in the footer in the near future.
The mill will be razed by the end of this month to reduce the risk of collapse from the winter snow load soon approaching. It is sad to see so much progress made to the site yet not be able to reach the finish line. It is an outcome that could not have been predicted.
Photo: EPA Public Profile |
The drop shifted floor support beams away from the walls so that portions of the floors are no longer in contact with the beams. Oddly, the beams were notched and butted onto the beams but never permanently secured. This poses a continuous problem with any restoration work as the repair work itself could cause a similar shift in other areas of the structure. It was an odd experience to look at a door frame and see a good 2 inch drop from one corner to the next in such a short span of space. This caused the wall in question to separate from the ceiling. Our tour did not include the second floor and I was perfectly comfortable with staying at the lower level.
It will be sad to see the structure go. Often structures are lost with no advance warning from natural disasters, fires etc. We will have a final opportunity to document the Green Street Mill with its written, oral and photographic history in tact. This will serve as a lasting record that this building was indeed here and was once a vital part of our business community. In addition, some artifacts from its contents will be transported to local museums to preserve her legacy.
Without TLC, buildings do not last forever. Additions were added onto this structure without ensuring foundation support would sustain it. It would be these final additions and the final industry of its last major occupant that has closed the final chapter on this structure; it is a building that we will surely miss.
You will gain a better appreciation of the vast amount of work already made in attempts to save our mill by visiting the public profile: (Be sure to click on the photos to the right side)
EPA Profile of the Green Street Mill
Please visit the Phase 1 report that covers the mill's historic timeline:
Phase-1A-Report
Again, a special section will be added to the footer of this blog as a permanent archive to our mill. Stay tuned to the EPA Profile link shown above for additional photos as they are added.
I would like to extend my appreciation to Michael Hoppe for proving a short tour of the project site so that I could see first hand the challenges they faced. Mr. Wilt has extended his blessing to make mention of the mill on my blog to update those interested in our history, past and present.
On behalf of the Port Byron community, we extend our deepest sympathies to the Wilt family for the loss of this historic structure that has tied several generations in their family.
Labels:
Erie Canal,
Local History