Sunday, February 24, 2013

NYSHM'S: It Happened Here -- Citizen Genet


                                                                                      (Rte 20,  East Greenbush)


He arrived in Charleston South Carolina, instead of Philadelphia because the Captain of the French frigate he was traveling in wanted to avoid battle with the more powerful British men-of-war rumored to be cruising off the month of Delaware bay.  But immediately France's new Minister Plenipotentiary to the United States of America began acting in some very undiplomatic ways.

Edmond Charles Genet, carrying the title of “Citizen” from the new revolutionary government in France was expected, by protocol, to go directly to New York (then the seat of government) to present his credentials to President George Washington. But instead, he lingered in South Carolina basking in the adulation of the local notables. Ever since the people of France had over thrown their King and produced their Declaration of the Rights of Man, many Americans eagerly awaited developments in France, feeling with some justification, America had inspired France's democratic revolution, and anticipating that France might be on the cutting edge of a democratic movement that might sweep the world. And Genet was the perfect celebrity guest. Handsome, urbane, cultured and gracious, to a fault, he was the European, democratic-man-of-the-enlightenment, everyone wanted to meet. In some ways he was almost the European counterpart of America's Ben Franklin, who had charmed the French court, a generation before. Having completed a round of balls, receptions and banquets in his honor, in Charleston, the French diplomat continued what amounted to a celebrity tour up the coast and into Virginia.

In New York, the President waited with some impatience and irritation, in part because he knew Genet's mission was ultimately to try to involve the U.S. in the developing war against Britain. More alarmingly, reports began to arrive of Genet's activities in the South that made him seem more like an agent provocateur, than a diplomat! Genet was reported to be contracting for ships to be outfitted as French privateers to operate out of American ports to attack British shipping and he was recruiting American crews to man these ships. Also, Genet was encouraging French-leaning Americans to form “Democratic-Republican clubs”, something on the order of the political clubs that were now contending for power in France, to oppose the President.

By the time Citizen Genet finally arrived in New York, President Washington was thoroughly vexed with him, refusing first to see him, then lecturing him on his behavior. Genet found the rest of the government aligned against him as well. Even Thomas Jefferson, who had traveled south to meet with Genet, now distanced himself from the French diplomat.

Given the cold shoulder in New York, Genet's fortunes turned against him in France as well. The Girondist club of moderates were muscled from power by the Jacobins and men like Marat and Robespierre began what became known as the “reign of terror”. Genet watched with increasing uneasiness as most of his political friends followed the aristocracy up the steps to their appointment with Dr. Guillotine's machine. The blow came when Genet received a sharply worded letter from the
Jacobin government condemning his lack of success in America and ordering him home.

His career in shambles, and his life in jeopardy, Edmond Genet turned to the man who had done the most to frustrate his objectives and had eventually even petitioned the French government requesting his recall. George Washington consulted his cabinet. They agreed from Thomas Jefferson, the francophile, to Alexander Hamilton who distrusted the French and hated the succession of increasingly radical French governments, that Citizen Genet be given political asylum – one of the first granted by the young United States government.

While Genet's schemes and projects had failed him, ultimately his charm would not. With what he could salvage of his fortune, and recoup from the sale of his furnishings, horse and carriage, and perhaps with help from friends and admirers, Genet was able to buy a small farm on Long Island. From there his social contacts led him to Miss Cornelia Tappen Clinton, the twenty year old daughter of His Excellency, George Clinton, First Governor of New York State. Acquaintance was followed by courtship; courtship was followed by marriage. The Genets would move into a farm carved out of the East Manor of Rensselaerwyck,  called Prospect Hill, near the village of Greenbush. There Genet would retire to the life of a gentleman farmer, apply for U.S. Citizenship, and write pamphlets on a variety scientific and technical subjects.


 Marker of the Week   
                      
1st Mince Meat
(Dougherty Mincemeat Co/Located here,Patent By
Dr Julius Allen of Port/Byron, Factory Burned 1885/
Patent Voided 1895)


You probably don't know where NY's first 
Mincemeat factory was.

You may not know what's in Mincemeat.

You might not know what to do with Mincemeat. (esp. if you were born after 1960)

(Port Byron/diced meat(mutton is traditional), suet, diced apples, raisins, currents, brandy, cinnamon, mace, nutmeg,and clove /Bake it in holiday pies-originally in a Christ cradle shape)
                                                                                                                                
Now you do.                                                                                                                         

E-Mail Me: If you have comments about Citizen Genet, Mincemeat, this blog or any other thing having to do with NYSHM's I would be delighted to hear from you. I would be especially interested if you know of any new or interesting markers or can report on any efforts to restore old markers. My email is


Next Week:  Caution -- Fragile Signs Ahead !


Sunday, February 17, 2013


NYSHM's: It Happened HereAnswers to the Presidents Quiz

Well, you waited patiently for the Answers to the Presidents Marker Quiz.   Here they are.

  1. Martin Van Buren, Kinderhook
  2. Geo. Washington, Albany, Ft Edward, 
    Greenwich




  3. Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Hyde Park
  4. Theodore Roosevelt, Oyster Bay, L.I.
  5. William Henry Seward, Florida 
    (Orange Co.)
     6.Teddy Roosevelt, Aiden's Lair
        (Adirondaks), Buffalo

     7. Chester Arthur, Colonie 
         (Albany Rural Cemetery)
      
    


       8.William Henry Seward, Auburn               

                   

       9. William McKinley, Buffalo                                                                

     10. Chester Arthur, Hoosic Falls







       11. Ulysses S. Grant, Mt.McGregor



                                                                                                                                                       

       12. Jimmy Carter, Highland Falls

          13. James Monroe, Sacketts Harbor


    14. Ulysses S. Grant, Goshen
    15. Grover Cleveland, Fayetteville
    16. Millard Filmore, Niles
    17. Grover Cleveland, Buffalo
    18. James Garfield, Poestenkill



    19. Chester Arthur, Newtonville


    20. George Washington, Fishkill  


                                                                                             


Marker of the Week
Ever had the impulse, after you have left
a job to want to keep in touch, just to make
sure your successor isn't screwing it up?
Gotta wonder if there wasn't some element of this, in this burial arrangement.

Can you imagine the poor preacher who is going along delivering his sermon and suddenly imagines he hears tapping... or worse, imagines his feet are getting hot ?!







E-Mail Me: If you have comments about this quiz, this blog or any other thing having to do with NYSHM's I would be delighted to hear from you. I would be especially interested if you know of any new or interesting markers or can report on any efforts to restore old markers. My email is


Next Week -- 
Citizen Genet,  and the Marker of the Week.

Sunday, February 10, 2013


NYSHM's: It Happened Here A Quiz for President's Week
by Tom Arthur

More than any other state, New York has been home to Presidents, and was frequently the destination of history-making presidential visits. It is not surprising, then, that many New York State Historical Markers have had presidents as their subject. In honor of President's Day this month I offer up a short quiz about Presidential NYSHMs. In each case, I am looking for (1) the President (or presidential hopeful) and (2) the location of the sign. If you know the existence of any other “Presidential NYSHMs” I would by very interested to hear about them, as well. (tba998 @ gmail.com) The answers and some pictures of the signs will be given in the next post,  next week. So here we go:

1. This president became so closely associated with his hometown, he was nick-named “Old
    Kinderhook”.Documents and papers that received his signature were said to have gotten
    his “O.K.”

2. Before he became President, this national figure toured the Hudson and Mohawk 
    Valleys visiting battle sites that were critical to American success in the American 
    Revolution.

 3. Though he was not known as especially religious, the only NYSHM marking his 
     residence in this town is one at the church he attended.

 4. A NYSHM commemorates this president's home on Long Island.

 5. This presidential hopeful in the election of 1860 was born here in a house that was later
     converted into a barn.


  6. This president stopped here to change horses in an urgent nighttime ride to take                 
      the oath of office to become president. He took the oath in the Wilcox Mansion, in this  
      city.

   7. This president is buried here in this “rural” cemetery.


   8. This New York Governor was a leader of his party and the leading candidate for 
      president.His neighbors turned out with a marching band, cannon and fireworks to 
      celebrate his anticipated nomination, but were devastated when an upstart lawyer from
      Illinois “stole” the nomination. He overcame his keen disappointment and   
      embarrassment, and would serve with distinction in his rival's cabinet.

   9. This president was shot in this city and died here 8 days later at Milburn House.

  10. This president lived here, and would attend Union College.  

  11. This president, suffering from throat cancer, came here to finish his memoirs and to  
      escape the summer heat in New York City. He died here. 

  12. The international incident that resulted in this president being perceived as weak, 
      and undermined his reelection bid ended here. Fifty two U.S hostages landed nearby, 
      and were driven to West Point.

  13. During the “era of good feelings” this President toured upstate New York and was  
     greeted at a bridge on the entrance to town by a nineteen gun salute, and a delegation of 
    Revolutionary War veterans. 

 14. This president loved horses. (He set an equestrian jumping record during his West 
     Point years that would stand for decades.) He was delighted to accept an invitation here 
     to see the trotters run.

  15. This president was the only president elected in two non-consecutive terms (1884 and 
     1892). He lived in this town as a boy, according to the NYSHM “in the first house on the 
     left, north  of the corner house.”

  16. As a boy, this president worked in this town in a fulling mill in 1814. (Extra points for 
      describing what's done at a fulling mill. In an upcoming post I hope to talk about the 
      NYSHM's that mark the locations of the carding and fulling mills that were fixtures in 
      many small 19th Century, New York towns.)
    17. This president lived here, and practiced law here from  1874 to 1881, not in the Ohio 
        city founded by a distant relative.

    18. As a young man, this president preached in its church here, and ran a writing school
        to help earn his tuition to Williams College.

     19. This president's father preached in the church in this small hamlet, north of Albany.

     20. While a general, this president-to-be had a sword made here, now in the
          Smithsonian.
                                                                                                (Seneca R., Cayuga Co Rte. 31, Monteauma)

Marker of the Week
(a more-or-less regular feature of this blog)

      “Paradise of Mosquitoes”! 

– Betch-ya the local Chamber of Commerce wasn't consulted on this marker.
                                                

E-Mail Me: If you have comments about this quiz, this blog or any other thing having to do with NYSHM's I would be delighted to hear from you. I would be especially interested if you know of any new or interesting markers or can report on any efforts to restore old markers. My email is


Next Week: The Answers, and another Marker of the Week.




Sunday, February 3, 2013

It Happened Here--A Blog About NewYork State Historical Markers

                           

                                  They stand in rolling grassy battlefields.








 and on the manicured lawns of historic houses, 



 




                            and in modest places of honor on village greens; 

 




 They also stand ignored on weedy toepaths,




rusting on the overgrown margins of a farmer's field,                                                                 





                                         








and knocked askew from the assaults of snowplows and errant automobiles, along empty stretches of New York's highways. 


                                                                                                               
 They are the blue and yellow cast iron markers of New York State Historical Markers*.




Welcome to It Happened Here—A Blog about New York State's Historical Markers. While every state in the union has historical markers to point out historic events and places in their states, New York has an extensive collection of perhaps 3000 free standing cast iron and cast aluminum markers. The first New York State Historic Markers (NYSHM's) were produced in 1926 to commemorate the bicentennial of George Washington's birth. They were greeted with such enthusiasm by the public that the State Legislature decided to continue the program under the auspices of the NYS Department of Education, with a large release of markers occurring in 1932 and 1933. Local governments with the help of local historical and civic societies were asked to make proposals for specific markers. Hundreds were produced through the 1930's. Production dropped off at the end of the decade and virtually ceased during the War years. In 1944 the Legislature decided to eliminate funding for the highway  marker program explaining that the nature of automobile travel had changed. Cars were now simply going too fast for drivers to read the roadside signs. Legislators expressed fears that the signs might even become traffic hazards, tempting drivers to stop or slow down to read them. At the same time, the Department of Education encouraged local governments and civic organizations themselves, to continue to produce historical markers for local parks and public spaces, suggesting they should develop their own formats to distinguish their signs from the State markers.

Town, village, city and county governments responded as did local and county historical societies, and civic organizations. Ad hoc groups. and commissions formed to commemorate a specific event realized the creation and dedication of an historical marker was an attractive activity that could get the public involved. Companies, families, foundations and individuals created their own markers. Over 500 local governments, groups and individuals would sponsor NYSHM's. 

Though the State Education department was highly successful in encouraging the continued creation of historic markers, they were less successful encouraging groups to create their own formats. By now the cruciform shape, with its blue background, yellow block letters and state silhouette perched atop it were nearly universally accepted as the format for an historical sign in New York. Just as important, the two or three casting companies, that produced these signs, could make ones to state specifications, for much less money than it would cost to produce a new design. By changing only the sponsor section of the sign from
 “State Education Department 1949” to “Town of _____ Erected 1949” local agencies could honor the “letter” of the Education Department's request, if not the “spirit” of its request. Only Erie County and the City of Buffalo would produce distinctly different signs in any quantity, though a few sponsors adopted formats used in other states, and offered by other companies.

 








Another way of differentiating local signs from state signs was by use of a different color scheme*. A lighter blue with white letters is popular; so is green and white; Monroe County and the Town of Ithaca use red and white.

Some local governments would use their seal in place of the state silhouette. Other groups would use a symbol significant to them. Over time, some casting companies would offer modified versions of the “State” NYSHM's. A rectangular version of the standard cruciform shape, with a pointed cap became popular and design changes were offered to strengthen the signs where they attached to their poles. (The original state markers showed a distressing tendency to snap off when struck by an automobile.)
 





Next Week: In honor of President's Week, this Month,  It Happened Here – A Blog about New York State's Historic Markers challenges you to identify the President, or Presidential-hopeful that is the subject of an NYSHM, and its location. (You may be surprised how many presidents have connections to the Empire State.) And The Marker of the Week