Sunday, January 14, 2024

E.C. Potter's Studio, Ulysses S. Grant in Stamford, Helen Keller in Port Chester & More!

 


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Welcome to the 16th of January, 2024 show.


In 1903 -long before Edward C. Potter’s statue of Col. Raynal C. Bolling was installed in front of the Havemeyer School Building, the people of Greenwich were introduced to the famous sculptor’s studio off North Street.


In neighboring Port Chester in 1913, Helen Keller and her teacher, Anne Sullivan, delivered a lecture under the auspices of the Port Chester Woman’s Club, with many from Greenwich attending.


Davis Tidal Mill. 


On Greenwich Life As It Is-And Was, Lucien B. Edwards wrote in 1924 about the town’s dwindling number of tidal mills. 


In 1880, Gen. Ulysses S. Grant appeared in Stamford, with Civil War veterans from both Stamford and Greenwich serving as an honor guard.


In 1919, a protest and petition was formulated against the showing of movies on Sundays. 


At a wedding in Glenville in 1911, the bride, Miss Mary Tvbjk married John Chevinz. She was presented with “about $40, with which to start a housekeeping, each male guest presented who danced with her paying $1 for the privilege.” Not a bad way to finance a new business. 



In 1928, Vito Dalto of South Water Street in Byram (formerly East Port Chester) was getting his haircut in the Sokol Barber Shop on Mill Street where be became ill -and died on his way to United Hospital in Port Chester. 




You’ll hear more about the Pickwick Arms Hotel of Greenwich, too.

 



Learn more about this exhibit here. 


You’ve come to the right place to learn about the history of the Town of Greenwich, Connecticut, one of America's most extraordinary communities.  


We’ll have all this -and more- as our history continues to unfold. 




I'm Jeffrey Bingham Mead, your host. Thank you for listening to the weekly podcast released on Tuesdays. 


Contact me and join our growing number of listeners anytime via email at greenwichatownforallseasons@gmail.com


Show podcast episodes are posted weekly on various social media platforms. Click this link to the show's Facebook site. 


I also encourage you to like and visit the group You Know You're From Greenwich Ct If, where links to the show are posted weekly, too. 


Mark your calendars. The next show is scheduled for Tuesday, the 23rd of January 2023.


On that show, you'll learn about the research services offered by the Greenwich Historical Society from John Bridge. 


A century ago, Judge Frederick A. Hubbard shared his reminiscences of the burning in 1874 of the original Town Hall -the one where the Soldier's Monument at East Putnam and Maple avenues is today. 


And that's for starters! There will be more. 


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