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MIDDLEBURGH — Cold. Colder. Coldest. Windy. Windier. Windiest.

A small group of OMOTM arrived Tuesday morning, Feb. 18, at the Middleburgh Diner. The winter is taking its toll.

Between the single-digit temperatures, the 60+ miles-per-hour wind, some ice and snow, Florida’s promise of warm weather, and doctor appointments, you know what you get? A modest number of OFs showing up for breakfast today.

Even I was tempted to stay home on Tuesday morning. Those thoughts started to enter my mind on Monday — with the temps remaining in the single digits, the wind howling, it gets going pretty fast at the south end of a frozen north-south lake. Rule #1: Don’t live at the south end of a north-south lake on a windy day.

I was in no mood to go outside and snowblow my driveway. We didn’t get much snow from the last big snowstorm that under-performed again. The approximately two inches of snow that did arrive was horizontal what with the wind and all. I don’t know where the snow finally came to rest, but it wasn’t in my driveway.

Even if I did go out and use the snowblower on what little ice and snow there was, with the wind blowing, the driveway would just drift over again in short order. Which leads me to Rule # 2: Don’t have an east-west driveway at the end of a north-south lake

I car-pool with another OF and it was my turn to drive this week so I decided to see how my car would handle the snow-packed driveway that I had failed to clear after the last two-inch blizzard.

I started to email him to ask if he would pick me up this week even though it was my turn to drive. I can do that because Frank is way younger than I and young guys always like to show that nothing stops them and they always like to help the old guys out.

They also don't miss the opportunity to tell us it would be “no problem” and it would be “his pleasure” to come get me in his big four-wheel-drive pickup that I need a stepladder to climb into (as compared to my 10-year-old two-wheel-drive Honda CRV. He would be happy to pick me up, “anytime.”

Anyway, I decided to see how my car would perform, so I stopped writing the email to go and check it out. It was at this time that my 4 foot, 11 inch vertically challenged daughter informed me that I wasn't going anywhere.

She told me that the garage door was frozen shut! It wouldn’t open. Rule # 3: Don’t have your garage door facing north into the wind at the south end of a north-south frozen lake.

Well! Now the shoe is on the other foot! I am the father, I am Pop, I am the hero, I can do anything, and I have, many times. Once again, it is time to saddle up and ride to the rescue. Usually I have my trusty companion with me, but that roll of duct tape was frozen solid in my unheated garage.

My other daughter gave me a birthday card last year that says, “There's Nothing that Dad and Duct Tape Can’t Fix.”

One of my grandsons gave me a baseball hat that reads, “DUCT  TAPE  DOUG” across the front.

Ah yes, the respect that flows from our children and grandchildren, the younger generation, to the OMOTM types, the older generation, just makes the goose bumps jump out all over the place! Good thing it is always accompanied with a lot of love.

So out into the cold garage I went. I first confirmed that the door was, indeed, frozen shut. Sometimes kids are mistaken.

I then set about scientifically fixing the problem, which involved vigorously kicking the bottom of the door while simultaneously clicking the electric garage door opener. It worked.

So now that the door was open, I got in the car and drove out the driveway and turned around and drove back in, no problem. Even the small pile of snow and ice at the end of the driveway left by the town snowplow proved to be just a speed bump.

I unsaddled my horse, rubbed him down, gave him his feed bag, and went back into the house and deleted the email to the OF asking for help. That really means I closed the garage door and went into the house, bragging that I fixed the frozen door.

So I remain the hero that can fix anything. The OF will have to tell me how old I am another day. I then sat down and rubbed my toes on my right foot because they were a little sore from kicking the door.

Oh, before I go, if you really want to know what the OMOTM talked about other than the cold and wind? There was an extended conversation all about car heaters. Imagine that.

Do you know the Nash, made by American Motors, was the last car manufacturer to still offer the car-heater as an option? It was standard equipment for all the other cars by that time.

The limited number of OFs who decided to make it to breakfast this week were: Harold Guest, Wally Guest, Ed Goff who had to leave early to take his grandson to work (another hero in action), Frank A. Fuss, Jamey Darrah, Wm Lichliter, Pastor Jay Francis, Warren Willsey, Gerry Cross, Jack Norray, Dick Dexter, John Jaz, Herb Bahrmann, and me.

— Photo by Hal Gatewood

“The great American composer John Cage used to say waiting in line was an opportunity to practice (the virtue of) patience, a dharma I adopted long ago,” writes Dennis Sullivan.

For Zio Pietro Bonventre

When I saw an essay by Joan Didion in the Dec. 5, 1976 New York Times Book Review called “Why I Write,” I was taken in right away.

It was because years earlier I read a piece by the grand master of the just phrase, George Orwell, with the same title. His piece appeared in the Summer 1946 issue of the British quarterly “Gangrel.”

Toward the end of my Sept. 24 column last year, I alluded to the importance of the essay.  

The topic is forever compelling because, by looking at what a writer has to say — even a novice in the dock — about the spark that projects him to sit with pen and pad and share his musings with the world, well, it’s a look into the person’s psyche, like overhearing him speak from the couch in his therapist’s office.

And whoever seeks in earnest to answer “Why do I write?” or maybe just “Why do I speak the way I do?” soon finds himself in the deepest dimensions of his being.  

Finding the right words — right as in exact — is not an easy task because words begin as neurons sparked by an electrical impulse — instigated by protoplasm — each impulse containing a message.

And taking down the messages without interfering is the work of the writer — the poet does it directly — and requires the discipline of being a good listener. 

The poet must have the patience of a person waiting in a long line at the supermarket that’s hardly moving and not suffer a jot of irritation.

The great American composer John Cage used to say waiting in line was an opportunity to practice (the virtue of) patience, a dharma I adopted long ago. 

The protocol of listening requires that the first thing the writer/poet/speaker does is go to the thesaurus of his soul — the deep state of subconsciousness and receive the symbols as they are being ignited, hopefully confirming what the person’s eyes are saying is in front of them.

 And as the words form, they express, reveal, the message the electrical impulse was sent to say, and, when caught right off the hoof, as it were, they speak to a collective dream every person in humankind shares.

Those who embrace politically conservative ideologies never go near this level of being because “collective” is anathema — especially after John Wayne rode his horse across the American landscape — and thus they reject all conversation having to do with what people and communities need to thrive.

It might seem strange that, while Orwell was writing “Why I Write” he was also composing “1984,” the quintessential story about what it’s like to live in a world controlled by a fascist dictator — a Big Brother, a King, or a Tsar — what the people in the United States are experiencing now.

The connection is understandable because in the novel Orwell was talking about the radical pain and suffering Big-Brother-types cause while in the essay he was telling people what they have to do to stop being shat upon. Like a loving uncle.

For starters, he says he’s like any other writer because all writers seek to “push the world in a certain direction, to alter other people’s ideas of the kind of society they should strive after.”

From 1922 to 1927, he served as a policeman in Burma, which he wrote about in “Burmese Days,” having come away knowing that people sell other people out when trapped inside a system that undermines the better side of human nature.

Those who know Orwell’s life know he garnered the courage to go to Spain in 1936 to fight in the Spanish Civil War to halt the fascist invasion of Big Brother Francisco Franco and, while on the front lines fighting side by side with his comrades, took a bullet in the throat.

The war experience he says “turned the scale and thereafter I knew where I stood.” 

Thus “Every line of serious work I have written since 1836,” he says, “has been written, directly or indirectly, against totalitarianism and for democratic socialism.”

And he knew “it [was] invariably where I lacked a political purpose that I wrote lifeless books and was betrayed into purple passages, sentences without meaning, decorative adjectives and humbug generally.”

Gandhi-like, he spent his waking moments waking people up to the importance of creating, living in, celebrating a society — convivial communities — that are designed to meet the needs of every one of its members; that’s what he meant by democratic socialism not the party-line spiel of the Marxist-Leninist-Stalinist politburo of Putin.

In Orwell’s democracy, leaders and citizens create institutions and programs to help reduce the pain and suffering of all by taking into account what people need, listening to the stories of others as a principal part of their ethical protocol.  

Thus, when I read what Joan Didion said in her “Why I Write” about the messages her neuronic impulses sent to her, I was chagrined. She sounds like an adolescent schoolgirl.  

She starts out with: “Of course I stole the title for this talk, from George Orwell.” 

And “One reason I stole it,” she adds “was that I like the sound of the words: Why I Write. There you have three short unambiguous words that share a sound, and the sound they share is this:

“I 

“I 

“I.”

Is that not adolescent schoolgirl talk?

Like Orwell, she too writes, Didion says, because, “In many ways, writing is the act of saying I, of imposing oneself upon other people, of saying listen to me, see it my way, change your mind.” 

But then she goes off the rails belying Orwell’s empathy. 

The writer, she says, is engaged in “an aggressive, even a hostile act. You can disguise its aggressiveness all you want with veils of subordinate clauses and qualifiers and tentative subjunctives, with ellipses and evasions — with the whole manner of intimating rather than claiming, of alluding rather than stating — but there’s no getting around the fact that setting words on paper is the tactic of a secret bully, an invasion, an imposition of the writer’s sensibility on the reader’s most private space.”

Secret bully? Invader of the “private space” of someone searching the thesaurus of his soul for meaning? Is she equating the writer with Big Brother?

I’ve read nearly every word Orwell wrote and I’ve never seen him as anything other than an empathetic seanchaí speaking in behalf of universal happiness.

And then, when we turn to the writer Janet Malcolm, we see kerosene poured on Didion’s fire. Malcolm says: “Every journalist who is not too stupid or too full of himself to notice what is going on knows that what he does is morally indefensible.”  

She says every writer is “a kind of confidence man, preying on people's vanity, ignorance or loneliness, gaining their trust and betraying them without remorse. Like the credulous widow who wakes up one day to find the charming young man and all her savings gone, so the consenting subject of a piece of nonfiction learns — when the article or book appears — his hard lesson. Journalists justify their treachery in various ways according to their temperaments. The more pompous talk about freedom of speech and ‘the public’s right to know’; the least talented talk about Art, the seemliest murmur about earning a living.”

Orwell never failed the test of humility; he said, “And it is also true that one can write nothing readable unless one constantly struggles to efface one’s own personality.” 

You can see why he’s my main mensch.

More about “1984” coming next in The Altamont Enterprise available at your favorite newsstand. 

It’ll address the Big Brother stressing the world out now.

DUANESBURG — We always look forward to the fine service and great food we enjoy at each and every one of the cafés and diners and the one kitchen we travel to on succeeding Tuesdays. Chris’s Chuck Wagon Diner in Duanesburg where we found ourselves this week, on Feb. 11, is no exception.

Right off the bat, we are in a good mood as the days are getting longer.

The days may be getting a little longer but it is still cold and has been for quite a while. The lakes and ponds are frozen. In fact, the ice on Warner’s Lake (after checking) was determined to be more than thick enough to safely hold the motorcycles, with their studded tires, for some races out on the ice.

First, the snow was cleared away and a race track was created and then the fun began. A nice crowd of both spectators and contestants watched from shore and from out on the ice as well. The parking lot at The Maple On The Lake restaurant was pretty full of pickups and trailers and customers.

Motorcycles were not the only things running around on Saturday. There was no shortage of snowmobiles, ATVs, and cars, all out there sliding around having a good time. Even ice fishermen were out there. I don't know how successful they were, but they were there. A good time was had by all.

 

Adult accomplishments

Near the end of last week’s column, I mentioned the our own OF, Mark Traver, was the man who played the role of Revolutionary War hero Timothy Murphy, greeting hikers at the top of Vroman’s Nose all dressed up in buckskins, coonskin hat, moccasins, and carrying his vintage “long rifle.”

That prompted our scribe emeritus, John Williams, to drop me a note saying he remembered those days and enjoyed the picture of Mark as Tim. It also stirred some memories of when he was a member of the Village Volunteers Fife and Drum Corps for many years. They even formed a militia that marched with the corps. (John served as president of both.) They went all over the area performing.

That got me to thinking: What about what the OMOTM did as young adults that today's readers of this column might find interesting and may even cause them to mutter, “I'll be damned, that’s pretty cool.”

Y’all got to remember this is the bunch of OFs with many who still go riding on their motorcycles. Maybe not racing on the ice this weekend, but definitely not spending their time sitting in the rocking chair on the front porch.

I asked a few of them at breakfast on Tuesday about what they might have done in their adult life that might surprise a few people. One long-time OF told me he was still a member of a bagpiper’s organization that performs all over and in parades. As the years go by, as has been mentioned before, parts of our bodies sort of wear out a little, so he is not as active today as he once was. 

Another OF was proud to recall his active volunteer time spent working on the final section of the “Long Path,” which is a hiking trail stretching from the George Washington Bridge in New York City to the Mohawk River after passing through the Schoharie Valley, including Vroman’s Nose and several Hilltown communities such as Middleburgh and Cotton Hill, before entering the state lands in Berne, and then following the Helderberg ridge.

Another OF spoke of teaching adults how to swim at one of the public baths in downtown Albany. He also mentioned, with a certain amount of pride and satisfaction, his work as a volunteer in the heart rehabilitation program at a hospital in North Carolina.

 

So many connections

I find it amazing to see how seemingly totally separate and distinct events can touch so many of us in big and small ways. To recount my own recent convoluted journey of how things can touch us in unexpected ways, I am interested in learning about early American history and the area where I live.

I went to a lecture on the last glacier age and how it affected the Hudson River School of Art. That's where I learned about Vroman’s Nose and the striations left behind by the glaciers 10,000 years ago. I just had to go see them for myself, so I did.

Turns out that a Vroman, Colonel Peter Vroman, was commanding the forces at what we now call the Old Stone Fort in Middleburgh. He and our hero, Tim Murphy, of the Battle of Saratoga fame and future resident in the Schoharie Valley, fought together, repelling the British and Indians in their attack on the fort. There is a museum now at the Old Storm Fort that is a bucket list item for me this summer.

Tim Murphy was part of the famed Morgan’s Riflemen during the war. After the war, General Daniel Morgan built a grist mill near Winchester, Pennsylvania where one of our own OMOTM members grew up, knowing the family and the mill very well. In fact, our OF was a member of the Morgan's Riflemen Corps and participated in many re-enactment events. He owns his own “long rifle“ and period military uniform.

So many connections to so many things right here in the Hilltowns and the OMOTM. I find it fascinating, and I have the feeling that I haven’t even scratched the surface.

Those OMOTM who made it to breakfast on Tuesday are: Harold Guest (Long Path), Wally Guest, Hon. Albert E. Raymond, Frank A. Fuss, Wm Lichliter (Morgan’s rifleman), Pastor Jay Francis, George Washburn, John R. Williams (scribe emeritus and fife & drum), Roger Shafer, Mark Traver, Joe Rack, Lou Schenck (bagpiper), Jamie Darrah, Warren Willsey, Paul Whitbeck, Marty Herzog, Jack Norray, John Jaz, Herb Bahrman, Dick Dexter, Gerry Cross, Paul Guiton, Elwood Vanderbilt, Bob Donnelly, Dave Hodgetts, John Dab, and me.

— Photo by Brandie Spohn

Mark Traver, one of the Old Men of the Mountain, plays the role of Revolutionary War hero Tim Murphy, greeting hikers at the top of Vroman’s Nose in Schoharie County.

DELANSON — On Feb. 5, the OMOTM headed for Gibby’s Diner at 10040 Duanesburg Road, which is Route 7 in Quaker Street, which is almost part of Delanson, which is almost part of Duanesburg. Y’all got all that? Yes, there will be a test.

And we got there on time again. We are always on time for breakfast, no matter which diner we are at that morning.

As I was among the first to walk into “our” room, I took the time to observe which OF went to what table and once there, which chair he occupied. Like I suggested a week or two ago, all you would have to do is tell any one of us which diner we are at, blindfold us at the entrance, and we could walk to our regular table and sit in our regular chair without bumping into anything.

I move around sometimes; it’s my job. As I sat at the table on Tuesday, the conversation mentioned a particular OF that we didn’t see come in, and we all looked at the table where he always sits! Sure enough, he was not there.

So, not only does the individual OMOTM know where he is going, so does everyone else! We even park our cars and pickups in the same place or area each week.

One of our OFs bought a new all-electric car a few weeks ago and it is still sitting in his garage with little or no miles on it yet. Why is that, you ask?

His answer was that he didn’t want to get it all dirty with the snow and slush and salt and sand that is on the roads. He will wait until the roads are clear, clean, and dry before he takes it out. We didn’t blame him, because we all remember how we treated our own new cars.

Then he told us how he was headed to court because of a speeding ticket he got. He then received all kinds of advice as to how to plead; did he have a lawyer? How fast was he going?

He did say he wasn't going that much over the limit and was hoping he could plead guilty to a lesser charge as he has a perfectly clean license. I’ll let you know.

He also got a jury-duty summons. He went as he was supposed to, and, when asked if he could be fair and impartial, he told the judge he would try, but he did feel that the defendant was guilty. He was dismissed.

This started a whole round of humorous jury-duty stories. One of the best of them again occurred when the judge asked the same question about being capable of being fair and impartial.

At the end of the OF’s rather lengthy answer, both the defense attorney and the prosecution attorney emphatically said they did not want our OF on the jury. The judge agreed and dismissed him.

Our OF then proudly asked the rest of us around the table, “How often do you think that happens, when both attorneys and the judge all agree that they don't want you on the jury?”

But getting back to the OF with the new electric car and the speeding ticket, he just wasn’t having a very good week. In addition to those issues, he put one brand new expensive leather winter glove on the table next to himself. Just one. Not a pair.

Of course, it took no time at all for someone to ask the question, “What happened to the other glove?”

Now that is a rather simple, straightforward question. It could have been answered (and should have been) with three words, “I lost it.”

Fresh from hearing, and obviously inspired by, the previous OF’s lengthy story about getting dismissed from jury duty, we got the whole story. Just about dating back to birth of this particular cow, buffalo, deer, or whatever it was, maybe a moose or elk. (Elk gloves would be cool, hard to find this side of the Mississippi.)

Sadly, our OF only got to wear them for part of one day before he lost one.

Remember when our mothers would sew a string on our mittens with the other end sewed to our coat when we were little so we wouldn't lose them? We are not little anymore.

We are the famous, renowned Old Men of the Mountain! We do not lose one glove, and, if we do, we make up a tall tale about how we heroically lost it while saving a damsel in distress in the tower surrounded by a moat full of alligators!

 

Hero comes to life

Just a note to flesh out last week’s column regarding Revolutionary War hero Mr. Timothy Murphy.

Our own member, Mark Traver, was a member of the Vroman’s Nose Preservation Corps and said the corps used to have an annual hike up the Nose in September when “Tim” would show up to greet the visitors at the top.

Mark pulled double duty as he posed as Tim Murphy in a period outfit with his vintage long rifle. He sent me a couple pictures.

This morning’s attendance does not include one member who is out there somewhere looking for his lost glove: Harold Guest, Wally Guest, Ed Goff, George Washburn, Wm Lichliter, Frank A. Fuss, Jamey Darrah, Jim Gardner, Russ Pokorny, Marty Herzog, Glenn (spelled with two “n’s”) Patterson, Roger Shafer, Joe Rack, Pastor Jay Francis, Mark “Tim Murphy” Traver, Lou Schenck, Gerry Cross, Jack Norray, John Jaz, Dick Dexter, John Dab, Paul Guiton, Henry Whipple, Dave Hodgetts, Elwood Vanderbilt, Bob Donnelly, Herb Bahrmann, and me.

— Photo from Dennis Sullivan

On the porch of the Bender House, in the 1980s, Dennis Sullivan, right, interviews Bill Taylor who bought the Bender Melon Farm.

For two great teachers:

Arthur Willis and Lydia Tobler
 

Dictionaries of the English language say “provenance” refers to the mapping of the ownership of a work of art — such as a book or painting — from its origin through different owners to the present day.

While a work of art has intrinsic value, oftentimes those who owned the object over the years, because of their importance, raise its market value, sometimes significantly. Regular viewers of the “Antiques Roadshow” on PBS know how it works.

I have a story about the provenance of a work of art that I think is as good a local-history-provenance story as you’ll find.

And it has to do with a book by a New Scotlander, Anna Hendrick Newhart, titled “Relations, Recollections and Reflections of the Hendrick Family,” which appeared in a severely-limited privately-printed edition in October 1936. That is, there may be only one copy alive.

I first heard of the work in 1985 when I began researching the history of the town of New Scotland’s prize agricultural gem, the Bender Melon Farm, which was located where New York State Route 85A joins Route 85 at the Stonewell Plaza. The properties of Fred the Butcher and Stonewell Plaza were once part of the farm.

Our paper, The Altamont Enterprise, published the findings of my research, half of the text in the August 28, 1986 issue and the rest a week later — all under the supervision and enthusiasm of our esteemed then-publisher, Jim Gardner.

At the time, I was told both issues sold out. I don’t know if that’s true but I do know there were a lot of people alive then who were familiar with the farm and who were interested in the history of the town they lived in: They knew of the farm’s fame.

Recognizing the value of the work, the New Scotland Historical Association asked to publish the text that appeared in The Enterprise and did so in a 40-page monograph called “Charles Bender and The Bender Melon Farm: A Local History” (1990).

When striving to find out all there was to know about the farm, I talked to agèd locals Jane Blessing and Sam Youmans and others, one of whom said — I no longer remember who, my memory offers a mea culpa — that Charlie Bender started his seedlings in the greenhouses at Font Grove Farm on Font Grove Road overseen by the renowned Colonel James Hendrick since the mid-19th Century. He had 21 large greenhouses known as “Font Grove Nurseries.”

And either that person or someone later said that the information about Charlie Bender’s seedlings came from a family history book written by Anna Hendrick Newhart, the daughter of the Colonel of Font Grove Farm who knew about her father’s relationship with Bender.

I no longer remember who told me about the book but somebody — again mea culpa — said the tome was in the possession of an antiques dealer in New Salem by the name of George Matuszek.

I got George’s number and called right away. I told him about my research and that I heard he had a book that included information about Charlie Bender starting his seedlings in the greenhouses at Font Grove Farm.

He knew what I was talking about, said he did own the book but no longer had it in his possession — my heart sunk.

He said he had loaned the book to the famed writer William Kennedy who had just come out with “O, Albany! An Urban Tapestry” (1983), a series of essays about the historical goings-on in the city of Albany way back when.

George told me he figured that, since Kennedy did something on the locals in Albany, he might want to do the same for New Scotland, an “O, New Scotland!”

I said, “George, have you lost your mind! Nothing happened in New Scotland!”

But he did say that, when Kennedy returned the book, I could use it.

I told him I knew Bill Kennedy since the early ’80s when a group of writers, journalists, college profs, etc. used to meet every Thursday at the Marketplace restaurant on Grand Street in Albany to drink and chat and share work, and that I had been blessed to be among them.

I told George that, if it was OK with him, I’d contact Bill and see if I could get the book back sooner.  He said: No prob.

I called Bill’s daughter and she said her father would meet me in a few days — I no longer remember the timeframe — at the famous Legs Diamond house at 67 Dove Street in the city of Albany that Bill bought during his rabid research to write his classic “Legs,” which came out in 1975 (Coward McCann and Geoghegan).

George said, “Well, if you’re going to meet the guy, how about getting me a signed copy of one of his books?” I said: No prob.

Straightaway, I went to The Book House of Stuyvesant Plaza and bought a paperback copy of Kennedy’s lyrical “Billy Phelan’s Greatest Game” (1978, Viking).

I met Bill as scheduled at the Legs house — we chatted for a half hour or so — I got the book and before leaving said, “Bill, would you sign this copy of Billy Phelan” and told him who it was for; and he wrote something like “Best Wishes George Matuszek; Cordially; William Kennedy” in a pretty clear hand.

If one of George’s daughters has the copy, she can say exactly what the wording is.

And with respect to what I started out to find, the Hendrick-Newhart book, on page 46, says, “For a year or two he [Charlie Bender] tested his seeds in the Font Grove greenhouses.”

So my original sources on the matter were correct, not only about where Bender started his seeds but where the information came from.

I should mention as well that, when I visited George’s home to present him with the autographed copy of the book, he said something surprising, “Hey, Kennedy didn’t sign this! You did!” That kind of logic.

I took a deep breath until my better angels showed to say what George really meant was he could not believe he actually had a signed copy — to him — of a William Kennedy classic.

But I found George even in his most businessman-like moments a most congenial fellow and we got along fine.

When the results of my research appeared in The Enterprise, the mayor and trustees of the village of Voorheesville asked if I might like to take on the official duties of the historian of their village, an invitation I gladly accepted.

Locals know that in 1989 I came out with a serious history of Voorheesville, published by the village — thanks to Mayor Ed Clark and trustees Susan Rockmore and Dan Rey — called “Voorheesville, New York: A Sketch of the Beginnings of a Nineteenth Century Railroad Town.” It reads like the Sunday paper.

And that book came about because, when I was interviewing the likes of Jane Blessing and Sam Youmans and Madelon Pound for the Bender project, I was often told I should have spoken to so-and-so but, when I asked where so-and-so was, I was told, oh, he died, which happened so often I came to the conclusion that, if I did not start working on the history of Voorheesville that very moment, much of its past would be lost to death.

Thus, once I finished with Bender, I started on Voorheesville. The tome is now in its fourth printing and receives high marks. I can describe its structure inside out.

When I took over as village historian, each year the mayor and board of trustees provided the office of the historian with a budget to purchase artifacts and the like related to the municipality’s history.

Now, with a few dollars in my saddle bag, I went to visit George and told him I wanted to buy the Hendrick book.

He hesitated saying, “I don’t think so; that book is worth a lot of money.”

On the spot I said, “I agree, the book is important, George; therefore I will give you $200 for it.” He came back with a sharp No.

I thought for a second then said, “OK, how about $300?” Again, a firm No and I figured that was the end of my relationship with a treasure from our commonwealth.

I had not seen George for years and forgot all about the book until late one winter afternoon on the way back from the post office, in the face of a wind-driven sleet, I saw George pumping gas at the Stewart’s Shop located diagonally across from the village hall in Voorheesville.

I asked how he was doing because his wife, Shirley, had died in November 1993. He said he was faring well enough and I offered my condolences.

And then, turning to go, I said, “Oh, George, what about the book!”

With no hesitation, he came back with another No, saying something like, “Someday the book will find its rightful owner.” 

So, for all intents and purposes, I closed my book on the book and the possibility of our community ever having an important piece of its history.

Then, seven or eight years later, while driving on Route 9H to Poughkeepsie to catch the Metro North to New York City, my bladder started whining for help.

I recalled there was a large brick barn near the Kinderhook exit that had been turned into an antiques emporium with many stalls (dolls, glass, old tools, postcards, etc.).

I pulled into the barn lot and inside hurriedly approached an elderly woman at the check-out desk, and asked if they had a restroom I might use.

She said shortly, “We have no restroom here.”

A bit miffed, I shot back, “You mean to say no one working here ever has to go to the bathroom during the workday?”

She shot back, annoyed, “We have no bathroom.”

I said, “Well, do you have a bathroom for customers?” figuring I would buy some trifle and quickly end my agony.

With emphasis: “We have no bathroom.”

As I headed to the door in search of relief, my eye caught some tables to the left with books spread across the top and, because I have a bumper sticker implanted in my brain that says I BREAK FOR BOOKS, I went over and quickly assayed the layout and, as I turned to go, my eye — mirabile dictu — saw it! The book! “Relations, Recollections and of the Hendrick Family!” My source for Charlie Bender!

I picked it up in radical disbelief, especially when I saw a price card sticking out from the top of its pages that read: $60.

More than slightly shaken, I took the blue hard-board-bound copy and hurried to the elderly woman at check-out, paid her the $60 fast to take my leave but did slip in that I had been looking for a copy of the book for some time.

She said, “Well, you’re lucky; the stall belonged to a man who died recently named George Matuszek, from New Scotland, we’re trying to get his family to come and get the books.”

I thought: George was right, the rightful person did come along to take possession of a work of art meant for him and for his community, and then whispered a Catullan-like prayer, “Ave atque vale, amice Georgi.”

From that day until today, the book has been part of the archives of the village of Voorheesville, which are now housed, and being catalogued, in the Voorheesville Public Library.

And for those interested in the outcome of my strained bladder that day, well, the back wall of the barn shared the joy of me finding a long-lost treasure as it got rained upon super-fluous-ly.

That is my story of provenance as I keep seeking to know if New Scotland’s citizens of today — which includes Voorheesville of course — care at all about the shoulders of the giants they now stand on.

No hay más que hablar.

— Photo by Sergeant Bender

A monument to Timothy Murphy stands in the Middleburgh Cemetery.

SCHOHARIE — The weatherman said there would be a short snow squall sweeping through at the exact time, 6:30 to 7 a.m. on Jan. 28, that the OMOTM would be driving to the Your Way Café in Schoharie. The weatherman was right, and the OMOTM were on their way. A little snow squall doesn’t even slow us down!

Our Scribe Emeritus, John Williams, was slowed down this past week and it was reported he spent a short amount of time in the hospital getting checked out. I think he spent about as much time in the hospital as it took that quickie snow squall to blow through.

He was heard to say something to the effect of, “All I did was sleep, and when I got home I was exhausted!”

That sounds about like our Scribe.

I have a whole bunch of good topics to write about this week. They range from jury duty stories, to a new electric-car purchase, to finally cutting the cable, to heated winter gloves, to one OF who just bought a nice pair of winter gloves and promptly lost one of them the first day he had them. I think one OF knew all about the lost glove but was waiting to see if a reward was being offered.

However, the star topic of the morning was all about a man called Timothy Murphy, a man from way back in the days of the Revolutionary War.

I was reading about something totally unrelated to Mr. Murphy when I had reason to check something out, so naturally, I googled it. In the process of that, I ran across Mr. Timothy Murphy.

The headline about him started off with, “Revolutionary War Hero.” Turns out, good ol’ Tim was an “expert marksman,” which is defined as being “able to hit a seven inch target at 250 yards.”

When the Revolutionary War started, Tim and his brother enlisted with the Northumberland County Riflemen and they saw action in the Siege of Boston, the Battle of Long Island, and “skirmishing in Winchester,” Pennsylvania.

Tim was promoted to sergeant in the Continental Army’s 12th Pennsylvania Regiment and fought at the battles of Trenton and Princeton. Because of his skill as an expert rifleman, Tim joined the newly formed Morgan’s Riflemen.

Subsequently, he was one of 500 hand-picked men to go with General Daniel Morgan to upstate New York to help stop General John Burgoyne at the battles around Saratoga.

Benedict Arnold, well before he became a traitor, is said to have pointed out English Brigadier-General Simon Fraser to General Morgan and said that he, Fraser, was worth a regiment. At that point, General Morgan called on Murphy to do his job and take Fraser out, whereupon Murphy climbed a tree, and at the extreme distance of 300 yards, shot and killed Brigadier-General Fraser while he was on his horse. Murphy took out Fraser's chief aide-de-camp as well.

Timothy Murphy was a major player in the lesser known, but important to the OMOTM, Battle of Middle Fort in the Schoharie Valley in 1780 (now called the Old Stone Fort in Middletown). On Oct 17th, British, Tory, and Indian forces led by Sir John Johnson and Chief Joseph Brant attacked the fort with Murphy being credited with being essential to the defense of the fort.

Allow me to quote from Wikipedia about a local hero that virtually all of the OMOTM knew about except me. But I do now!

“Having already been admired as a hero of the Battle of Saratoga, he was able to largely partake in repelling attackers and leaving the residents unharmed. As the story goes, Murphy fired upon British forces that were coming to discuss the rebel surrender of the fort.

“Refusing to be taken prisoner, Murphy continued firing upon them, disregarding orders of a superior. This action led to the decision of the British command to back off of the fort and continue onward. Much of the folklore surrounding Murphy comes from his ability as a rifleman, and his dedication as a patriot.”

This is just another true story about the fabulous history of our wonderful country that surrounds all of us that live, work, and play in the mountains and Hilltowns of the Hudson River Valley. Without the Timothy Murphys of our land, there would be no George Washington or Abraham Lincoln for us to honor.

I have previously mentioned that there are many surnames of current Hilltown residents on many of those headstones that date to the Revolutionary times. These markers may be found in the many family plots and cemeteries throughout the Hilltowns, and some of those families are currently represented among the OMOTM who get together each week for breakfast.

Some OMOTM roots run very deep and travel a long way back in time.

Speaking of breakfast, the following OMOTM made it through the snow squall to the Your Way Café where everyone except me and maybe one or two others already knew all about Mr. Timothy Murphy. They are: Mr. Harold Guest, Wally Guest, Hon Albert E. Raymond, Frank A. Fuss, Roland Tozer, George Washburn, Wm Lichliter, Joe Rack, Roger Shafer, Mark Traver, Russ Pokorny, Jim Gardner, Glen Patterson, Lou Schenck, John Jaz, Jack Norray, Gerry Cross, Herb Bahrmann, John Dab, Paul Guiton, Elwood Vanderbilt, Bob Donnelly, Dave Hodgetts, Jamey Darrah, and me.