Sometimes a Teasing Self Promotion is in Order

Since the publication of Huletts Landing on Lake George, I sometimes get asked if I’m working on a second book. To date, I’ve always answered that I’ve been too busy and that quite frankly, every truly bit of interesting information that I had regarding Huletts was published in Huletts Landing on Lake George.

Additionally, I’ve always felt that any good history book must have an interesting story attached to it. After writing Huletts Landing on Lake George, I couldn’t see unearthing anything else which could add to the story presented in Huletts Landing on Lake George.

That is until recently when an historical artifact was given to me which was so intriguing, the story just presented itself.

Now you’re probably thinking, “oh what a tease, tell us what you’re working on”. Well if I told you now, it wouldn’t be worth the wait and secondly I have no idea when I’ll finish it because the Huletts Current while quiet now, does take a good bit of my spare time.

I will say this:

a.) it is an ongoing project with no clear finish date.
b.) there are pictures that have never been seen publically before.
c.) the story has even led me (figuratively) to Springfield, Illinois which is better known for it’s significance in the life of our 16th President.

If you see me, don’t ask. You’ll have to stay tuned here to learn more.

Trash Removal Reinstated on Lake George Islands


Young campers enjoy Floating Battery Island, one of the campsites in the Narrows Group of Lake George.

Due in large part to public pressure and efforts made by the Lake George Association, the Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) has reversed an earlier decision to discontinue trash collection centers for the Lake George islands in 2011.

The DEC has decided to raise campers’ fees to offset the costs of operating the trash collection centers. In 2011, in-state campers will pay $28 per night and out-of-state campers will pay $33. Rates in 2010 were $25 a night for all campers. These new rates and the reversed decision are not yet reflected on DEC or camp reservation websites.

Earlier this summer the DEC announced that, beginning in the 2011 season, it would no longer provide trash removal services for people camping or picnicking on the Lake George islands. Due to state budget problems, the DEC announced it would be implementing a “carry in, carry out” policy for the islands. At the time, DEC spokespersons said that the decision was final and non-negotiable.

The LGA responded immediately, with Executive Director Walt Lender issuing a letter to DEC Commissioner Pete Grannis. In that letter, and corresponding letters to the editors of local newspapers, Lender encouraged the DEC to consider alternatives and to meet face to face with Association members, local elected officials, and other local stakeholders to gain a better understanding of the history and unique local situation regarding these campers and campsites. With pressure mounting from State Senator Betty Little, Assemblywoman Teresa Sayward, local officials and other groups, the DEC agreed to meet.

The decision deeply concerned the LGA, as trash left behind at campsites, floating in the water, or piling up at lakeside marinas, can be highly detrimental to both the lake’s water quality and to its beauty. Buck Bryan, LGA past president, in an interview with Albany’s Times Union, shared his memories of what it was like before the state started garbage collection on the lake in 1955, and it wasn’t pretty. There was garbage all around on the sites, he said. Marina owners and other shoreline business owners are also well aware of the severe problems that occur at their businesses when state garbage collection is inadequate: garbage overspills from their small private containers.

“The solution really came out of the meeting that Senator Little hosted in Bolton,” said Walt Lender. “Then Betty and Assemblywoman Sayward went back to Albany and did some heavy lifting. We’re very pleased that the service will continue, but we hope campers will plan accordingly and keep their trash to a minimum,” he said.

As has been the case for over a decade, 2011 island campers will be required to remove all of their trash and recyclables from their individual campsites, and will have the option to take it by boat to one of three garbage collection centers: Uncas Island, Narrow Island or Long Island. Campers can stay on the islands as long as two weeks. Without these collection centers in place, the responsible camper would either have had to store up to two weeks of garbage at their campsite or on their boat, or they would have had to interrupt their vacations mid-week, boat back to the shoreline, get in their cars, and drive their garbage to a town landfill — not the easiest task for out-of-town campers not familiar with local landfill locations. A more likely scenario would be that more campers would either leave their trash behind at the campsite, where it could easily flow into the Lake, or would dump it in the private dumpster of a marina or other a shoreline business, causing an unfair burden to these businesses.

Bits of Everything

Medicaid & Pensions Bust Budget: Wash County Looks at 18% Tax Rise

The Wash Blog looks at Washington County’s proposed budget for next year. It doesn’t look good.

5 Towns Claim Navy Started There

Yahoo News reports that 5 different towns lay claim to being the birthplace of the US Navy. (Hat tip to Jason Weeber for the link.)

Scientists Look for Common Threats

Lake George and Lake Tahoe Researchers look at common threats, says the Adirondack Almanack.

Author Details Gruesome 1973 Spree


Hadley-Luzerne Public Library
Oct 26, 2010 @ 7:00 PM
Guest Speaker: Lawrence P. Gooley

Terror in the Adirondacks: The True Story of Serial Killer Robert F. Garrow presented by author, Lawrence P. Gooley. It’s an incredible story and Mr. Gooley will be sharing his recollections of this harrowing period of Adirondack history. He has written a top selling book that for the first time ever tells Robert F. Garrow’s story from birth to grave. In the summer of 1973, a serial killer’s rampage in the Adirondack Mountains changed the region forever. Innocent visitors and campers were brutally killed, terrifying thousands of residents and vacationers.

Funding provided by the Town of Lake Luzerne and Warren County Visitors Occupancy Fund. For further information call 696-3423.

Voting Absentee

Please know that the General Election is fast approaching. Here is how to obtain an absentee ballot if you are registered to vote in NY state.

Qualifications to Vote by Absentee Ballot:

Absent from your county or, if a resident of the city of New York absent from said city, on Election Day;
unable to appear at the polls due to illness or disability;

A patient in a Veterans’ Administration Hospital;

Detained in jail awaiting Grand Jury action or confined in prison after conviction for an offense other than a felony;

How to Vote by Absentee Ballot

Applications for Absentee Ballots are available at your county board of elections.

You may also download a PDF version of the New York State Absentee Ballot Application Form. ( 261KB)

Upon completion, applications must be mailed to your county board no later than the seventh day before the election or delivered in person no later than the day before the election.

You may also request an Absentee Ballot by sending a letter to your county board of elections. The letter must be received by your county board no earlier than 30 days and no later than seven days before the election. The letter must contain the following information:

the address where you are registered
an address where the ballot is to be sent
the reason for the request, and
the signature of the voter

An application form will be mailed with your ballot. The application form must be completed and returned with your ballot.

Washington County Board of Elections
383 Broadway
Fort Edward, NY 12828

Phone: 518-746-2180
Fax: 518-746-2179

The Halloween Parade

The Halloween parade will take place this Saturday, October 9th at noon. It will start in front of the Post Office and finish in front of the soda fountain.

While the little ones are enjoying some ice-cream, congratulate the Mackell sisters on 20 years of their family successfully running the soda fountain!!

Bits of Everything

Elephant in Room Can’t Be Ignored: Property Taxes Killing NY

The Times Union starts a series on NY’s debilitating property taxes.

Whitehall’s High Taxes & Freebies Kill Two Marinas?

The Wash Blog and the Post Star tell the sad story of present day Whitehall.

Whitehall’s School Enrollment Up Now / Down Long-Term

A Time to Learn Blog notices Whitehall’s school enrollment is headed downhill for the foreseeable future. (Hat tip to Will Hudson for the link.)

Back to the Huletts School


The former Huletts school house as it looks today.

This past summer I had a chance to sit down with Francis Borden and talk in-depth about what it was like for him to attend the Huletts school house when he was a young boy. Below is my interview with him.

Attending a one room school house was made popular in the television series, Little House on the Prairie, but that was the way students in Dresden were educated for a long time.

“Yes, there were a number of schools in Dresden. Clemons had a school. Dresden had a school near where the old town dump once was and the Huletts school was actually District # 5. The boundary line for attending the Huletts school was on top of the mountain. But in those days everyone walked to school and you had to be close enough to walk.”

Could you give the readers of the Huletts Current an idea of what a school day was like for you?

“Well to begin, I had to make three trips up the mountain every day. I walked up the mountain in the morning. We got sent home for lunch, so I had to walk up the mountain again at one in the afternoon, and finally I had a job cleaning the school house so I would walk up again after school to sweep and clean the building. So if nothing else, I got my exercise.”

So there were children of numerous ages learning different things simultaneously?

“Yes, for instance, the Gregories from the top of the mountain were there, Ken Robbins’ son Ben Robbins was there and and Beulah Cooper was actually the last teacher I remember. Different things were being taught to different students but it was a very good education. The fundamentals of reading, writing and arithmetic were drilled into everyone.”

Are there any pictures that remain from those days?

“Ben Robbins sent me one a few years ago and I’ll be happy to look for it for you.”

The Huletts school house only went up to the 8th grade, correct?

“Yes, when we graduated were were taken by station wagon to Whitehall for high school.”

Station Wagon?

“Yes in those days, no buses came to Huletts and there were only about 4 or 5 of us from Huletts. So we were driven in a station wagon to Whitehall. I actually graduated early because I skipped 2 grades. So when I went to high school, I was only 12.”

So the Huletts school turned out some well educated students!

“I would say so. I did the 1st and 2nd grade in one year and then 5th and 6th grade in one year. It was a good education and we were made to work.”

It certainly was a time that was much different than today. Thank you for sharing your recollections with us.

“I’m happy to. The one thing I wish is that I had more pictures. It was a way of life that really can’t be described. But that’s the way it was. I’ll certainly never forget walking up the mountain three times a day. Every day.” (Big Smile)

Quiet this Week

It’s been quiet this week, because we’re getting to a point in the year where “news” is a little bit slow in Huletts. However, I did some interview this week that I’ll be posting over the next few weeks. So stay tuned, there’s more to come.

Bits of Everything

Fee Hikes to Pay for Island Trash Removal?

The Adirondack Almanack reports on an interesting development on the proposal to end trash pickup on the islands.

Paladino Unfit? Open Letter Shows Hypocrisy

BuffaloNews.com posts an opinion which is worthwhile reading. It takes on three politicians who object to Carl Paladino being well … a politician.

“D’Amato, McCall and Koch see Paladino as a threat. Yet they have no problem with a state government that never saw a tax, a fee, a patronage job or a public-sector perk that it didn’t like. In the last 10 years, the state budget hyperinflated from $77 billion to — hold your breath — this year’s $136 billion. That is a hike of nearly 80 percent. If you let your household budget run that wild, you would be out of a house.”

Paulist Fathers Ponder Future

Looks like the Paulist Fathers are evaluating their land on Lake George, says the Adirondack Almanack.

No Joking Around: Peterson Says State Layoffs to Start Soon

The Times Union says that Governor Paterson is going to start layoffs by the end of the year.

EZ Pass in Ti

Now can now buy EZ pass in Ticonderoga. So says Denton Publications.