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    <title>The FListory Blog</title>
    <link>http://blogs.fingerlakes1.com/flistory/</link>
    <description>Bits of our past from throughout the Finger Lakes</description>
    <language>en-us</language>
    <pubDate>Fri, 20 Nov 2009 21:04:19 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>Enna Jettick: Airship Carried Finger Lakes Publicity Throughout The Nation</title>
      <link>http://blogs.fingerlakes1.com/flistory/enna-jettick-airship-carried-finger-lakes-publicity-throughout-the-nation/</link>
      <description>Enna Jettick shoes were a quality line of women's shoes and sold for $5 and $6 a pair and manufactured in Auburn, NY. The company's slogan was, &ldquo;You need no longer be told you have an expensive foot.&rdquo; The shoe factory was only a couple of blocks from where we lived, and my father worked there for many years. Today the site on Washington Street is an empty lot.- by Carmelo Signorelli, Auburn Citizen onSaturday, September 23, 2006For the full article from an archived 'FINGER LAKES TOPICS' newspaper including some neat local historical advertisements, click here.</description>
       <pubDate>Tue, Nov 10th 2009, 09:28 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>The Auburn Inquirer, 1933</title>
      <link>http://blogs.fingerlakes1.com/flistory/the-auburn-inquirer-1933/</link>
      <description>In the early 1900's, Auburn had it's very own tabloid. Here's a shot of the front page of the August 26, 1936 issue that could have been had for just a nickel.
Click here for a full sized version of this scan</description>
       <pubDate>Mon, Sep 21st 2009, 11:11 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>1834 Guide for Erie Canal Area</title>
      <link>http://blogs.fingerlakes1.com/flistory/1834-guide-for-erie-canal-area/</link>
      <description>The following is an excerpt from 1834's edition of "The Tourist", a popular travel guide of the day. These pages describe the area along the Erie Canal and Finger Lakes region between Syracuse and Rochester. Images courtesy of Tompkins County NYGenWeb.</description>
       <pubDate>Sun, Aug 2nd 2009, 20:34 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>Cayuga Lake Ferry</title>
      <link>http://blogs.fingerlakes1.com/flistory/cayuga-lake-ferry/</link>
      <description>The below photo is one of many different ferries that brought automobiles and their passengers across the north end of Cayuga Lake. This ferry is docking in Bridgeport to unload its "car"go before loading up again and heading east to the Village of Cayuga.
The ferry most remembered on Cayuga Lake was the Busy Bee which          was operated by Captain James Quick (photo below) for many years.What follows is an          account of this vessel written by Wheeler A. Bassett and published in          the Interlaken Review, a local newspaper, on December 4, 1951.
Back in the 'eighties on a summer day two men and a youth set          out to attend the Auburn Fair. They drove to Kidders Ferry and there embarked          on the ferry boat for King's Ferry. At this point they took a train for          Auburn.
Jim Quick was running the boat, a tall, lanky, young man, about          in his middle twenties, to whom they plied many questions. Seeing a horse          on board, they asked, "What is the horse for?" "That is to run the tread          power," he said. "When the wind fails we put him on the tread, and that          runs the paddle wheels," and, sure enough, coming home at night, there          was no wind, so resort was made to the horse to bring them home.
"I made another trip while you were gone," said Mr. Quick. "A          man and his team wanted to come across." "How did you know they wanted          to come across?" " I saw the sign out," pointing to a board sign about          six feet square, painted white on one side and black on the other. "When          the white side is out, that means 'Come over'." That was in June, 1881,          to be exact.
The boat proved to be the Polly Ann, the old ferry          boat that preceded the Busy Bee. Young Captain Quick was just learning          the business, but one would never have known it to see him run the boat          that day. Sixty years have passed. Every ferry boat on Cayuga Lake is          now extinct. For the first half of that period they throve and performed          an almost indispensable service to the public. But inventive man is always          seeking something better. Although it travels on land, the automobile,          for the last thirty years, seems to have superceded the ferry boat, and          thereby romance lost, while speed gained. Interest still persists, however          in a certain craft called the Busy Bee, and its captain Jim Quick.
The Busy Bee is now only a memory, but Captain Quick          is still with us. It was our privilege recently to visit him in his little          cottage beside Cayuga Lake at Kidders. We found him living alone, for          his faithful consort of fifty-nine years passed away three years previously.          His mind was clear as ever as we reminisced on many things. He was born          on a farm off the road not far from McNeil's Church eighty-seven years          ago. His father, Henry Quick, moved to Kidders Ferry in the late 'seventies,          where he ran the ferry boat, Polly Ann, for a few years until          Jim learned the business.
Our main topic was, of course, the Busy Bee. He built her, he          said, between his cottage and the lake, a distance of only a few rods.          James Bennet, of Sheldrake, an old canal boat builder, was the designer          and builder. On April 21, 1886, a license was granted by the Legislature          to James V. Quick for twenty years to run a ferry from "the termination          of Turnpike Road (King Ferry) to or near the dock or landing place of          Myron R. Cole, at Kidders Ferry."
The Busy Bee was equipped for either sail or steam, sixty-feet          over all with a seventeen-foot beam; the gunwales were four feet high.          She usually came to rest near the steamboat landing, just back of Captain          Quick's cottage, with her stern first. The gunwales at this end were let          down to rest lightly on the shore so a man or animal could easily walk          on board. The rudder was a long, heavy paddle, detachable by hand. The          Captain was captain, skipper, mate and helmsman, all in one. With one          hand he adjusted sail, with the other he steered the boat, and if by chance          he had to leave his post, chains were at hand to fasten to handle of rudder          to hold her on a straight course. The distance across the lake is two          miles and a fraction, and the captain once made it by sail in nine minutes,          he said. With the horse it took an hour, with steam one-half hour. Fare          for crossing was for a single passenger, 25&cent;; single horse and wagon,          75&cent;; team and wagon, $1.00. Asked what was his biggest load, he said he          once brought over a Quaker funeral party consisting of fourteen horses,          ten carriages, and eighty-three people, bound for an old cemetery near          Jacksonville.
In the cold winter of 1885, the boat froze in fifteen inches of ice.          Captain Quick rigged up an ice boat and delivered the mail in three minutes.          Genial and accommodating to all, he was liked by everybody. The children          loved him for the free rides he gave them. For eighteen years, winter          and summer, he met four trains daily, carrying mail and express. At the          same time he was Postmaster. An important factor in his life was the summer          boarder.
Along in the 80's and earlier there was a trend for people to get out          of the city into the pure air of the country, especially the lake country.          Cole's Hotel, the Cayuga Lake house, and the Sheldrake House, had regular          customers year after year. Some brought their children and stayed all          summer; husbands came for week ends. Added to these were summer residents          like the Leverichs, the Rappleyes, the Taylors. These persons added to          the tempo of life all along the lake and, naturally, Captain Quick reaped          some of the benefit. He performed their errands, he took out excursion          parties, he met them at trains, and, if I were to ask him, I think he          would say that life for him then was at high-tide.
Nothing is more permanent in this world than change, and to Captain Quick          change was bound to come. With the advent of the automobile and good roads          business fell off so much he ran the boat only from May 1st to November          1st. Finally, the boat wore out, the Captain said. Expenses went up and          business did not warrant costly repairs; for instance, the last mainsail          and jib cost $300.00. The gallant boat was finally pushed into her last          resting place near the dock&mdash;there she lay in plain sight for years          after, rotting in the water, mute evidence of an era that was past; but          Captain Quick lived on, cheerfuly adapting himself to a changed life,          while the lake with her ever changing moods and always in sight was to          remind him of the conquests he made on her waters with his beloved Busy          Bee.
Note. May D. Leverich, now Mrs. George K. Hooper, of          Pasadena, California, named the Busy Bee. In a letter to Myron          W. Bassette, she says she was an interested spectator at the christening,          which was performed by Captain Quick's little daughter, Anna, now Mrs.          Albert Haviland, Sr. She writes how the Captain held his daughter, then          a very little girl, and helped her break the bottle while she murmured          in a tearful voice, "Busy Bee." The time was June 1884.
For 18 years, winter and summer, Captain Quick met four passenger trains          daily on the Lehigh Valley Railroad, which had lines on both sides of          the lake. He recalled he would make as many as eight or nine trips a day          during the busy season.
The advent of the automobile and improved roads cut into this business          and it eventually became apparent that the Busy Bee was obsolete.          She made her last trip on June 4, 1914, and was tied up on the north side          of Kidder's dock. Eventually, she was stripped of machinery and the hull          was allowed to lay at anchor until sinking.
Reminiscing about the old days, Captain Quick said that the original          Polly Ann was propelled by sail and a treadmill operated by an          old grey horse. He said the Busy Bee was actually built by James          Bennett of nearby Sheldrake who also built canal boats.</description>
       <pubDate>Mon, Jul 27th 2009, 09:42 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>The Frontenac c.1905</title>
      <link>http://blogs.fingerlakes1.com/flistory/the-frontenac-c-1905/</link>
      <description>The Frontenac Steamboat is pictured below circa 1905 at Taughannock Falls on Cayuga Lake. In 1907, the steamboat would sink to the floor of Cayuga Lake. Don Quan, an expert on Finger Lakes Steamboats offers the following analysis of the photo:  I can't tell what the boat at the end of the dock is, but it is either  the Mohawk or the Iroquois. Both boats had a similar appearance after  1905 and even during the days when they were on the lake, people got  the two confused. The photo was taken prior to the installation of  searchlights on the pilot houses of the Mohawk and Iroquois. It comes  down to unless you read the name on the bow or stern of the boat, you  don't know which one it is.  Thanks to Bill Hecht for the photo and Don Quan for the information.For a larger version of this photo click here.</description>
       <pubDate>Wed, Jul 22nd 2009, 11:14 GMT</pubDate>
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