Postal Service Proposes Cutting Hours

This just in.

The Postal Service is proposing to reduce the hours of operation of the Huletts Landing post office from 8 hours to 4 hours a day and the Clemons post office from 8 hours to 2 hours a day.

See page 158 of the following list.

The Postal Service has posted a 260-page list of post offices where hours will be reduced. It includes current retail operations and proposed reduced hours.

In addition to reducing hours, the Postal Service will seek to offset the cost of keeping all rural facilities open by offering $20,000 buyouts to about 21,000 postmasters, Chief Operating Officer Megan Brennan said at today’s news conference, the Federal Times reports.

Now for Some History & Genealogy

Photograph (circa 1940) showing the Harvey Hulett family. Harvey Hulett (sitting) was the great, great, grandson of David Hulett. Oliver Hulett (standing) was the great, great, great, grandson of David Hulett. Also pictured: Stella Jane Brown Hulett (sitting); wife of Harvey Hulett, and Ada Stella Hulett, Marian Amelia Hulett and Gladys Brown Hulett; great, great, great, granddaughters of David Hulett.

Ever wonder what the original Huletts family of Huletts Landing looked like? Well the above picture is the only picture I have of the Harvey Hulett family from around 1940.

Harvey Hulett was the great, great, grandson of David Hulett.

Here is the exact lineage all the way back to the David Hulett buried in Huletts Landing.

David HULETT Rev. soldier was born on 22 Feb 1750-60? in Killingly, CT. Died on 3 Oct 1832 in Hulett’s Landing, Dresden, Washington Co., NY

Son: Harvey B. HULETT (wife: Olivia Pratt) was born in 1794 in Tompson, Windham, CT. Died on 4 Jan 1868.

They had the following children:

i. Harvey HULETT
ii. Arnold HULETT
iii. Alonzo Alanson HULETT
iv. Philander HULETT

Son: Harvey HULETT was born on 20 Oct 1822 in Dresden, NY. Died in 1894 in Fair Haven, VT. (wife: Prudence Ann PRATT)

They had the following children:

i. Andrew A. HULETT
ii. Prudence Addie HULETT
iii. Emma Jane HULETT was born on 25 Sep 1856. Died in infancy.
iv. Francis H. HULETT, died on 5 Jan 1860 in Dresden, NY.
v. Harvey Russell HULETT
vi. Carrie E. HULETT was born in 1863 in NY.

Son: Andrew A. HULETT was born on 6 Apr 1852 in Putnam, NY. Died on 11 Dec 1913. (wife: Evanettie KIRBY)

They had the following children:

i. Harvey Arnold HULETT
ii. Ada Stella HULETT was born on 24 Sep 1876. Died on 27 Jun 1880.
iii. Anna Jane HULETT was born on 10 Mar 1884. Died on 15 May 1890.
iv. Bernice HULETT

Son: Harvey Arnold HULETT was born on 24 May 1882 in Ripton, VT. Died on 24 Dec 1948 in Benson, Rutland Co., VT. (wife: Stella Jane BROWN)

They had the following children:

i. Oliver Harvey HULETT
ii. Ada Stella HULETT
iii. Marian Amelia HULETT
iv. Gladys Brown HULETT

Son: Oliver Harvey HULETT was born on 4 Oct 1907 in Benson, Rutland Co., VT. Died on 25 Oct 1964 in Benson, Rutland Co., VT. (wife: Janet ACKERMAN)

They had the following children:

i. Heather Vilette HULETT
ii. Hope Clark HULETT
iii. Holly True HULETT

Fort Ti’s Curator Fox to Speak in Huletts this Summer


A picture of Fort Ticonderoga from the 1800’s before it was restored.

I’m happy to announce that the Friends of Historic Huletts Landing will host a talk by Christopher D. Fox, Curator of Collections of Fort Ticonderoga, during the summer of 2012. Mr. Fox will speak about the 19th century history and restoration of Fort Ticonderoga. Learn how Fort Ticonderoga fell into disrepair during the 1800’s and how it was restored to its original character.

Mr. Fox is a specialist in 18th-century military matieral culture and related documentary and domestic arts with nearly 20 years experience in managing and interpreting important museum collections.

If you love history or learning more about the local community, his talk will certainly interest you! More as the summer draws closer.

Picture courtesy of the Friends of Historic Huletts Landing.

e-Edition of Book Scheduled for Summer

Attention all Kindle, Nook and iPad users. I’m happy to announce that there will be an e-edition of The Hulett Hotel Fire on Lake George coming this summer.

I can report that while the process will take a few more weeks, an e-edition will distributed through the most prominent e-book sales channels sometime probably in the next three months.

Just in time to relax with The Hulett Hotel Fire on Lake George on the beach!

Clemons PO Gets Another Reprieve


The Postal Service has again postponed the closure of the Clemons Post Office.

I spoke with postal officials this afternoon who confirmed that the Clemons Post Office will be open through the Memorial Day weekend.

The Clemons Post Office was scheduled to close this past January but the Postal Service postponed the closure due to some U.S. Senators asking for a reprieve.

More on this as it develops.

School District Election

The Whitehall School District will have an election Tuesday, May 15th between 12:00 noon and 9:00 p.m. in the Large Group Instructional Room of the Junior/Senior High School on Buckley Road:

1.) To adopt next years budget.
2.) To elect three (3) members of the school board.

I am planning on submitting questionnaires to all those running for the school board.

School’s Enrollment Declines Again

My disappointment with the school board for some time has been that the steady yearly declines in enrollment have not translated into reduced property taxes.

In the past few days, school district “report cards” were released for the 2010-2011 school year. This is the last publicly available information on enrollment. So the most up to date information is for the LAST school year.

Numbers for the current school year (2011-2012) and projections for next year (2012-2013) are not available. However as you can see, enrollment has been falling in the Whitehall School District (and is projected to continue to fall) while property taxes have increased over the same period. So here is a table (compiled from public sources) for the last seven years of available data.

04-05 05-06 06-07 07-08 08-09 09-10 10-11 % Change
# Students  885 860 858 845 815 779 753       -14.91%

As you can see, there has been an overall drop in total enrollment of almost 15% during the last seven years. Enrollment has declined every year during that time.

The three biggest individual yearly losses of students: 30, 36, and 26, have all happened over the last three years. In other words, the decline in yearly enrollment is accelerating.

When the school board claims they have cut spending, they have.

Except that it all comes from the state aid side as the state of New York has cut its aid to school districts.

The falling enrollment has not amounted to any cuts in property taxes. Losing 132 students over a seven year period (92 in the last three) resulted in no property tax savings for the local property taxpayers.

So there are the enrollment numbers for you to see.

Bits of Everything

I haven’t done these in a while so they’ve piled up.

Post Star: Bolton Marina Owners Agree to Boat Wash Station Concept

Times Union: Northway Facing ‘Intolerable’ Future

NCPR: Huletts May Get New Congressman thru Redistricting

CNN/Money: International Paper in Ticonderoga one of Worlds Most Admired Companies

Times Union: Late-night Compromises Bring Some Pension Reform

Adirondack Almanack: 1932 Death Mystery in Hague

Adirondack Almanack: Hiking Mount Defiance in Ticonderoga (Click Picture to See Full View)

LGLC Offers Scholarship Contest

The Lake George Land Conservancy is offering the first of what is planned to be an annual scholarship totaling $1,000 to high school seniors who live year-round in the Lake George basin.

To apply, a high school senior must submit an essay between 1,000 and 2,000 words addressing this year’s question: “If you were elected the Wizard Mayor of the Lake George watershed, what would your first three projects be and why?”

Essays must be received by April 1 and should be submitted by email to: hbartonbenedict@lglc.org

Eligibility is restricted to high school seniors who live year round in the Lake George basin and includes year-round residents of Huletts Landing. One $500 first-place and one $250 second-place prize will be awarded and an additional $250 will be awarded to the first-place winner’s school science program.

For more information contact Helen Barton Benedict, the LGLC’s development manager at 518-644-9673 or email her at: hbartonbenedict@lglc.org

I spoke to Ms. Benedict this morning and a sub-committee of Lake George Land Conservancy board of directors and staff will determine the winners. The essays will be judged on knowledge of Lake George and creativity.

Winners will be announced by June 1.

Proposed School Budget: Higher Property Taxes Again

The Post Star has an article on the recent deliberations by the school board on next year’s budget.

You can read the Post Star article here.

While it’s nice to learn that the school board is taking some steps to control next year’s budget, the entire story still leads to more local stagnation.

Local property taxes still go up under next year’s budget, enrollment is projected to fall again (per student spending continues to rise), and funds will be moved from reserve accounts to balance the budget. At the end of the day, the school district is working on a proposed budget of $13,205,125 for approximately 750 students!

To put this in context, calculated on a per-student basis, this approaches or exceeds the tuition for many elite private schools across the country. However, Whitehall is ranked as one of the lower performing schools in the state. Because the school district’s enrollment has declined, and is predicted to decline further in the future, this should be the perfect time to be cutting spending and property taxes.

An easy way to look at a school’s enrollment is to take the students graduating from high school and see if the pre-school/kindergarten enrollment for the next year matches, falls below, or exceeds the number graduating.

A hypothetical example follows. Take a school where 120 students graduate and 60 students enter for a number of years. As time goes by, instead of needing roughly six classes per grade (calculated at 20 students per class) only three classes per grade would be necessary to accommodate the lower enrollment. The class size of 20 students per class though would stay the same.

If managed properly, the number of classes per grade fall as the overall enrollment declines and the younger grades graduate to the next level. Once again, if instituted correctly, the number of classes shrink as the lower grades move up through the school.

However, public sentiment can be manipulated if proposals are made to cut classes in grades with higher enrollment. Take the hypothetical example above; if you told the parents in a grade with 120 students, that half the teachers in that grade would be eliminated, and class sizes were going to jump to 40 students per class, there would be a public outcry.

If managed improperly, there are wild differences in class size and the number of classes by grade. Public sentiment can be easily swayed with arguments over increased class size.

Sadly Whitehall’s destruction of its tax base is noticeable by all; businesses have left, houses sit on the market unsold, people leave for jobs elsewhere. So while we’re paying property taxes like our local district is an elite private school, we’re dealing with one of the lowest ranked districts in the state. The numbers tell a story. Throwing money at the problem has been shown not to work. The only way to turn things around is to cut property taxes. Until the school board learns that lesson, Whitehall’s demise will sadly continue.

Father William Esmond, 1923-2012


Father William Esmond, 1923-2012

I am sad to report that the former long-serving Pastor of the Chapel of the Assumption in Huletts Landing and Our Lady of Angels Church in Whitehall passed away recently.

Father Esmond spent a good portion of his adult life in Whitehall and Huletts Landing and was loved by the people in the communities that he served. I have many fond memories of Father Esmond, including him in his Navy uniform! He will certainly be missed.

Fr. Esmond’s complete obituary is in the Post Star.

“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.”