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2017-18 Dining Guide Web

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82<br />

Students from Grades 1 and 2<br />

at Newcomb Central School<br />

were the first official visitors to the<br />

Newcomb Historical Museum May<br />

24 and 31, <strong>2017</strong>. Dr. Joan Burke,<br />

the Museum’s Director, scheduled<br />

two visits for Mrs. Amanda Bush’s<br />

classes to introduce the students<br />

to Newcomb’s rich heritage and<br />

history with pictures of places<br />

and people, several old schools,<br />

founding fathers, and with stories of<br />

the life and times here in the <strong>18</strong>00s<br />

and early 1900s.<br />

Dr. Burke showed them three small<br />

tin-types and prints from archival<br />

scans of the daguerrotypes from the<br />

Leslie Rist Collection. First a print of<br />

a young girl about their age, another<br />

of her mother and baby brother, and<br />

finally a group portrait of the girl’s<br />

family. She explained how sweet<br />

the girl looked with her freckles and<br />

curly hair, and how sad for us that<br />

they were all unknowns; almost<br />

certainly connected to Newcomb,<br />

but no information has been<br />

provided about them. Dr. Burke<br />

then asked each student to return<br />

with a personal photograph and tell<br />

us who they were with, what they<br />

were doing, and where they were.<br />

Important information is lost when<br />

photographs are left behind without<br />

details.<br />

After hearing about Daniel<br />

Newcomb incorporating the town<br />

in <strong>18</strong>28, a boy remarked that he<br />

knew him. The passage of almost<br />

two hundred years ago meant little<br />

to a student who was impressed<br />

with his horse-drawn wagon-ride<br />

Reach our advertisers at:<br />

into Camp Santanoni with “Mr.<br />

Larry Newcombe”.<br />

It was, therefore, not accidental<br />

that the next visit started in front of<br />

a timeline of bright blue painters’<br />

tape divided into fifty-year sections.<br />

A pointer for a tiny span indicated<br />

the students’ own lives, hopefully<br />

putting 100 years into some<br />

perspective. After reviewing the<br />

earlier events in Newcomb’s history,<br />

students moved into the room<br />

housing the Museum’s new exhibit,<br />

“Mining Life in the Mountains: The<br />

Tahawus Story” to consider the<br />

history of Tahawus, the National<br />

Lead mine, and eventually the<br />

move to Winebrook. Here there<br />

were pictures and artifacts from a<br />

community that no longer exists:<br />

old bowling pins from the YMCA,<br />

sports trophies, a hard hat and a<br />

photo of Bernie Killon (a Sinter<br />

Plant employee) from Minerva<br />

wearing his, mine dust from the<br />

bottom of a miner’s locker, some<br />

mail boxes from the Tahawus post<br />

office, and much more. On another<br />

wall was a large survey map of<br />

Winebrook a year before the town<br />

move and pictures showing some<br />

of the students’ great-grandfathers,<br />

then on the job for National Lead.<br />

Toward the end of the day, students<br />

watched parts of the 1963 film<br />

of the move—big trucks pulling<br />

and pushing homes, apartments,<br />

churches, and the store into<br />

Winebrook, where several of the<br />

students now live. This concluded<br />

their visit, and they asked to come<br />

back! A successful event, indeed!<br />

ADK<strong>Dining</strong><strong>Guide</strong>.com • ADKStoresandGalleries.com • ADKEntertainment.com • ADKAccommodations.com

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