Last Day for a Clemons Postmark will be…


The Postal Service has already decided to close the Clemons post office.

I confirmed with the US Postal Service yesterday that the last day of business for the Clemons post office will be Friday, January 6, 2012.

The Postal Service said they will notifying their customers in Clemons this week.

Arline Marie Babiak, R.I.P.

I am sad to report that long-time Huletts resident, Arline Babiak, passed away on Monday, November 28th.

Mrs. Babiak was a great person with a wonderful smile, who will be missed by all who knew her.

Here is her obituary published in the Post Star.

Our condolences and prayers go out to her husband, Art, and the rest of her family.

“May God support us all the day long, till the shades lengthen and the evening comes, and the busy world is hushed, and the fever of life is over, and our work is done. Then in His mercy may He give us a safe lodging, and a holy rest and peace at the last.”

Clemons Post Office to Close


A picture of the Clemons post office.

The United States Postal Service has officially decided to close the Clemons post office. While not completely unexpected, this is indeed a blow to the town of Dresden and the many people who have used the Clemons postal facility for many years. I will be seeking additional confirmation about when the last day of operation will be.

This now leaves the Huletts post office as the only post office in Dresden.

Please remember to continue to buy stamps and your postal products from the Huletts post office while you are away. Pam Stragnell, the Huletts Postmaster, will be happy to send you a “stamps by mail” envelope by which you can order stamps and other postal products from the Huletts post office.

Bits of Everything

Theodore Reale, Designer & Engineer of Huletts Sewer Systems, R.I.P.

Recently the Times of Ti carried the obituary of Theodore Reale. “Ted” as his friends called him, was the principal of A.P. Reale and Sons, the primary designer and contractor for both of the sewer systems that serve Huletts.

Washington County Leaders Want Budget Lowered

The Post Star reports that the 2012 Washington County budget was struck down by the county Board of Supervisors who didn’t like the 1.97% increase.

Know Every Adirondack Tree? If Not, Buy This

The Adirondack Mountain Club (ADK) is reprinting Forests and Trees of the Adirondack High Peaks Region by the late Edwin H. Ketchledge, the definitive guide to Adirondack trees. What a great gift idea! Read the Adirondack Almanack to learn more.

Zip Line Down French Mountain Spurs Two Towns

When it comes to a new zip line, both Queensbury and Lake George are ready to lead, so says the Post Star.

Historic Mars Launch: NASA rover ‘Curiosity’ blasts off

NASA’s biggest and most-expensive robotic rover has blasted off from Cape Canaveral on an Atlas 5. The probe, nicknamed Curiosity, is scheduled to arrive on Mars next August. It aims to search the surface for clues about whether the planet has ever had a life-friendly environment.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sERwkbPHTvs

To see some cool as heck animation on how NASA plans to land “Curiosity” on Mars, view the video below.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bqkzkptszfs

The Strange Story of the Lost Dauphin of France and the North Country

A painting of Marie Antoinette with her son, Louis-Charles, on her lap. (circa 1787)

At the time of the French Revolution, the son of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette, was known as Louis-Charles, Dauphin of France. He was abducted on August 10, 1792, when only eight years old, as the French revolution waged on.

When his parents were executed for treason under the first republic, the newly orphaned eight year old Louis-Charles would have been the nominal successor to the abolished throne.

He was imprisoned in the custody of a shoemaker named Antoine Simon. The Dauphin was kept in confinement and treated with great cruelty until he is said to have died in June 1795. He would have been 10 years old at the time of his death and was buried in an unmarked grave.

Rumors quickly spread that the body buried was not that of Louis-Charles and that he had been spirited away alive by sympathizers.

He had never been officially crowned as king, nor ruled. However, he was called by his royalist supporters Louis VII and the future Louis XVIII’s adoption of the title Louis XVIII rather than Louis XVII only added to the mystery.

Against this background, there is a legend that the Dauphin was taken secretly from his dungeon and brought clandestinely to northern New York, where there was a sizable population of Frenchmen still loyal to the monarchy. This strange story has been the subject of serious historical speculation for many years.

In the middle of the 1800’s, the Rev. John H. Hanson, an Episcopal priest, wrote a logical account of how a certain Eleazer Williams, an Episcopal priest of the North Country who died in 1858, might have been the lost Dauphin.

Williams was thought to be one of 12 children of Thomas Williams and grandson of Eunice Williams of Deerfield, Mass. who was one of the inhabitants captured by the Indians in the massacre of that village. Supposedly, eleven of Thomas Williams offspring bore unmistakable evidence of Indian heritage while Eleazer did not. Also, no record was ever made of Eleazer’s birth.

Williams himself claimed to have no knowledge of his own life before the age of twelve or thirteen. By his own account, he served in the War of 1812 as a scout and spy for American forces on the northern border of New York. After the war, he became an Episcopal missionary and was sent to the Oneida Tribe of upper New York State. He proved to be successful there, converting many of the Oneida to the Episcopal faith.

When the French monarchy was restored in 1814, hundreds of claimants came forward. Would-be royal heirs continued to appear across Europe for decades afterward.

In 1841, Prince de Joinville the younger son of Louis Phillip, the reigning King of France came to the United States. Williams would claim that the Prince had offered him a vast estate if only Williams would renounce his claim to the throne which he said he refused to do. The Prince denied this story as soon as he heard of it, saying that his only interest in Williams was as an Indian missionary.

In the February 1853, issue of Putnam’s Magazine, the Rev. Hanson, an Episcopal minister, published an article entitled “Have We A Bourbon Among Us?” That article also supported Williams’ claims. Serious historians immediately refuted Hanson’s speculations, but many others believed him and, for a while, Williams was something of a minor celebrity.

Williams died in the village of Hogansburg, NY on August 28, 1858.

The story did not die until 2000 when DNA testing proved beyond doubt that Louis-Charles had indeed died in prison.

Philippe-Jean Pelletan was one of the doctors who attended Louis-Charles shortly before his death and subsequently performed the autopsy. He removed the heart and this was not interred with the rest of Louis-Charles’s body. Philippe-Jean Pelletan tried to return Louis-Charles’s heart to Louis XVIII and Charles X, both of whom could not bring themselves to believe the heart to be that of their nephew.

The heart was stolen by one of Pelletan’s students, who confessed to the theft on his deathbed and asked his wife to return it to Pelletan. Instead, she sent it to the Archbishop of Paris, where it stayed until the Revolution of 1830. By 1975, it was being kept in a crystal vase at the royal crypt in outside Paris, the burial place of Louis-Charles’s parents and other members of France’s royal family.

In 2000 DNA testing was performed on the heart using samples from Marie-Antoinette, her sisters, their mother, Maria Theresa, and two living direct descendants in strict maternal line. The tests proved that the heart was that of Louis-Charles. It was buried in the Basilica on June 8, 2004 and forever dispelled the claims of the North Country preacher named Eleazer Williams.

(Compiled from online and print resources.)

Happy Thanksgiving

“None is more impoverished than the one who has no gratitude. Gratitude is a currency that we can mint for ourselves, and spend without fear of bankruptcy.”
~Fred De Witt Van Amburgh


A statue of William Bradford, a Mayflower “Pilgrim” and Governor of the Plymouth Colony in Plymouth, Massachusetts.

I would like to extend my sincere wishes that each of you have a wonderful Thanksgiving.

For a little enjoyment, read this list of notable Pilgrim descendants.

Dresden Cuts Town Taxes

On Monday, November 14th, the Dresden town board finalized the 2012 town budget. The amount to be raised by taxes is actually $2,850 less than 2011! This translates into a 0.73% decrease in taxes from 2011 to 2012. The town board should be congratulated for keeping the town budget in excellent shape during these trying fiscal times and actually lowering taxes!

While the general budget increases 2.73%, the highway budget decreases 8.68%, which brings the entire amount needed to be raised by taxes in 2012 to a lower amount than 2011.

In another bit of good news, the total debt of Sewer District #1 is $140,586, down from $185,775 a year ago.

While Whitehall has just passed a 10% tax hike for next year, which thankfully does not effect Dresden residents, our local town board has really worked hard to keep Dresden town taxes low.

You can see a summary of the 2012 town budget here. (Note: the preliminary budget was marked up and what you’re seeing are the final numbers written in by hand.)

Sign Time

I did a post some time ago about Jane McCrea, but this sign sits across the street from the Fort Edward high school and it caught my attention as I was driving by this past summer.

Her murder in 1777 was a galvanizing force for the colonists fighting the British at that time.

Saturday Quote

The Bridge Builder
By: Will Allen Dromgoogle

An old man going a lone highway,
Came, at the evening cold and gray,
To a chasm vast and deep and wide.
Through which was flowing a sullen tide
The old man crossed in the twilight dim,
The sullen stream had no fear for him;
But he turned when safe on the other side
And built a bridge to span the tide.

“Old man,” said a fellow pilgrim near,
“You are wasting your strength with building here;
Your journey will end with the ending day,
You never again will pass this way;
You’ve crossed the chasm, deep and wide,
Why build this bridge at evening tide?”

The builder lifted his old gray head;
“Good friend, in the path I have come,” he said,
“There followed after me to-day
A youth whose feet must pass this way.
This chasm that has been as naught to me
To that fair-haired youth may a pitfall be;
He, too, must cross in the twilight dim;
Good friend, I am building this bridge for him!”

Source: Father: An Anthology of Verse (EP Dutton & Company, 1931)

Dresden Election Results: Final

Final Vote Totals Dresden Local Election
Absentee Ballots included.

The Board of Elections finished counting all of the absentee ballots today and this is what I can report. There were 29 absentee ballots sent out, 21 were returned. (Out of the 21 returned, one was a military ballot.)

Below are the final vote totals. This includes the machine vote totals posted last week and the absentee ballots counted today.

Town Supervisor     Votes
Robert Banks*     93
   
Town Board (2 winners)
John Barber*     101
Allen Wilbur*     86
   
Town Clerk
Marci Wilbur*     104
   
Town Highway Superintendent
Richard Hobus*     117
   
Town Justice
Jack Eggleston*     90
   

* Winner

Congratulations to all the winners, may they serve our town well.

Bits of Everything

Popular Ti Restaurant Closes

The Times of Ti reports on the closing of the Carillon Restaurant.

Lake George Rock Climbing Gets National Exposure

The Lake George Mirror tells us about Paddle to Crag on Lake George.

Saranac Lake Community Store Profiled in NY Times

The hearty residents of Saranac Lake started their own store and made the NY Times.

Cash Coming In from Trash Plant Going

The Post Star reports that Washington county will receive a windfall because we no longer have the trash plant to operate.

The Best Christmas Party

On Saturday, December 10th at 5 p.m. in the Huletts Landing firehouse all the hearty souls who live in Huletts year round will be holding the annual Christmas Party!

This event has gotten rather large in the past with about 70-80 people attending last year.

So if you would like to stop by, put it on your calendar now, and please contact Luke Smith at:

supvsmith@yahoo.com