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John N. Dietel

John Nicholas Dietel served as mayor of Fair Haven for three years from 1890-1892, and again in 1898.

He was born to Johann and Anna Dietel in Stammbach, Bavaria on Novermber 24, 1849.  In 1855, when John was six years old, his brother, Thomas, immigrated to Dearfield, New York.

Following the death of his father, Thomas returned to Germany to bring is mother, sister and brother, to Dearfield. They landed in New York City on October 31, 1864 in the middle of the Civil War. John was fourteen years old and soon secured an apprenticeship in Syracuse as a tinsmith.

Barbara Raithel was born in Switzerland. She and John were married about 1871. Their first child, Charles, was born October 10, 1873.

In 1874, he moved to Fair Haven to open his hardware store. Fair Haven was poised to grow at this time, the railroad having arrived two years before. His first hardware store was located near where the home of Roy Lyons later stood on the south side of Main Street, opposite where is now the State Park entrance road.

After the auction of the Cottage Farm lots, land became available nearer the center of Fair Haven. Twenty-five year old John Dietel moved his business to a new building down the road which still stands today as the Hardware Cafe. In 1875 he moved his family into the apartment above the store. Among the items he sold were stoves, glass and paint.

In 1881, the Dutch Reformed Church on Church Street burned. The congregation wished to rebuild closer to central Fair Haven. In April of 1883, John Dietel traded a lot he owned on Richmond Avenue for their old lot on Church Street for $1.00. Here he built a new home for his family.

On May 13, 1885, Barbara passed away leaving John with three children to raise, William, four months old, Josie, 5, and Charles, 10.

The following year on May 4, 1886, he married Louise Schulze, also of Germany. They had three more children, Eveline, Otto and Lucette.

In 1892, an addition to the Hardware Store was added, nearly doubling its size.

In addition to his hardware store, he purchased the hotel that had originally been the Barrus House and renamed it Hotel Dietel.

Otto Dietel moved to Auburn where he worked as a plumber.

William Dietel, a tinsmith and plumber.

Water color postcards were made of the Dietel house about 1905.

Eveline married Harry Longley on November 22, 1905 at her father’s home on Lake Street.

1907, John Dietel with his granddaughter, Louise Ophelia Longley (Smith), on the porch of the house next door to his that he had built for his daughter Evenine Dietel Longley at 14501 Church Street.

In 1908, John sold his hardware store to his son, Charles.

Teaching Louise how to drive the new auto-mobile.

 

* Alternate spellings: Deitel, Dietle, Nicholaus, Nicalous, Nichalus, Nicolus, Nicolaus

 


Women of Fair Haven

What is revealed when we research the women of Fair Haven that might otherwise be overlooked?  How do the stories of women’s lives and views differ from how history is commonly told?

What might sound different about the history of Fair Haven if a woman from 100 or 200 years ago wrote it?


Zip Northrup in Fair Haven

The subject of the 2013 Academy Award winning Best Picture is the kidnapping of Solomon Northup (also spelled Northrup and Northrop by some family members). Northup had been born a “free man of color” in upstate New York. He was a well educated, talented violinist who was abducted in 1841, transported to Louisiana and sold into slavery. The film is based on his 1853 autobiographical book titled Twelve Years A Slave. In January 1853 friends in Saratoga, New York received intelligence regarding Solomon’s whereabouts and, with the help of New York Governor Washington Hunt, arranged for his freedom. The story of his ordeal and survival fascinated readers at the time as well as preserving a firsthand account of the slaveholder practices in that era of America’s history. Continue reading “Zip Northrup in Fair Haven”


Pierre Dumas

Also known as Peter Demass

Pierre Dumas was the first permanent settler in Sterling, arriving in 1805. Born in France, he immigrated to New York Colony prior to the Revolutionary War. On June 11, 1786 he married Mary Huntley in Stillwater, Saratoga County, New York. Mary was born to Ezra and Phebe Robbins Huntely in Dutchess County February 20, 1763.

During the Revolution, Pierre served as a gunner with John Lamb’s 2nd Artillery Regiment.

The bounty land he received after the war was located in Romulus. He sold that land in 1805 and purchased acreage on Lot 19 in on the south rim of Sterling Valley from James Bynder and Thomas Macdonough.

 

 

 


E. R. Robinson

E R RobinsonElisha Randolph “Dott” Robinson moved to Fair Haven about 1873 with Mendel Family relatives. Robinson and Mendel formed a business together. Later, E. R. went into business with H. S. MacArthur and then with Fayette Phillips to form the Robinson & Phillips store, the largest general store in the northern end of Cayuga County (circa 1881).

E. R. was a member of Hudson Post 159 of the G.A.R. and its first commander. He attended many reunions and reenactments of Civil War battles, including the Gettysburg Reunion in 1913.

He was a Town Supervisor for about eight years and Chairman of the Cayuga County Board of Supervisors for a time. E. R. was a member of the Old Dutch Reformed Church and when that burned, became a charter member of the Fair Haven Presbyterian Church afterward. He died in Warsaw, New York at age 82, in September, 1924.

born 1841 July 27 in LaGrange, Town of Covington, Wyoming County, New York
to Nathaniel C. Robinson and Roxa Mendel Robinson

enlisted Spring of 1862 – Company D, 130th Regiment of New York State Volunteers
Transferred to New York 1st Dragoons, cavalry

1864 As a member of the army, he voted for Abraham Lincoln in 1864.

mustered out 1865 mid year – rank Sergeant

married Cornelia “Nellie” Lane about 1876

died 1924 September, Warsaw, New York, age 82



Edna E. Williams

1883 February 17 – 1967 July 22 – age 84

Before and After:  Edna E. Williams in youth and older. The photographer of the studio portrait on the left is unknown. The photo on the right is Edna in her later years taken to match the earlier pose – assumed to be a self-portrait.

Edna E. Williams was born in Sterling in 1883. By the time she was 17, she had moved to the brick house on Ontario Street to help care for her maternal grandparents, Augusta and Sarah Kosboth Green.

At the turn of the century, Kodak was publishing ads such as this in magazines, showing a woman developing film in her home. They sold all of the necessary equipment and chemicals via mail-order. Perhaps an ad such as this inspired Edna to begin her career as a photographer. She started with glass negatives that she prepared herself and used sunlight to expose her prints. Several of her original glass plates survive today.

Eventually, she worked with large celluloid negatives and then 35mm film roles.

Do you remember Edna? Please share with us your memories of her or her photographs.

The Edna Williams Project is working toward cataloging Edna’s photographs and published postcards.


My Grandmother, Edna Williams

by June MacArthur

When looking at early 1900’s pictures of Fair Haven Bay, the old lighthouse on the west side, or the railroad trestle and ships down where the State Park is now, you probably didn’t realize the original photographer of many of those black and white photos was a small, very shy woman named Edna Williams.  She was my step-grandmother.  Edna’s only son, George Green, and my mother got together when I was about twelve years old and we moved into their big, brick house on Ontario Street at the top of Wilde Hill coming into Fair Haven. It had a cupola that their earlier relative, W. W. Green, a Custom House Officer used to watch for ships coming into Fair Haven.

Edna Williams, must have been in her late 70s when we moved in with her.  She was very thin and had shrunk to under five feet tall.  She had lots of cats and kittens about the farm, grew beautiful flower gardens, and had thousands of glass negatives in boxes everywhere. I was interested in photography, so we’d sit at the kitchen window and she’d show me her glass negatives by viewing them through the sunlight coming in the window.

She explained that she had printed pictures at that same kitchen window.  She’d put a red light bulb on in the kitchen and have the trays of developer under the table. In the beginning days when she just did contact prints from the glass negatives, she’d raise the green shade and use the sunlight to expose the photo paper. But later she had an enlarger and used electric lights to expose her paper. I later joined the photography club at Red Creek High School. I’m afraid I wasn’t interested in the old ways she did things. Now, I wish I had asked more questions and paid more attention to what she did tell me. To be able to use her old cameras, and develop and print the photos the old way would be a treat!

She took many photos of the waters; around Fair Haven and Sterling, waterfalls at Sterling Center and Valley, of sailing ships and smoking steam vessels on Lake Ontario and coming into the Bay and loading coal at the train trestle, vacationing people touring by boat, horse buggy, train, and later by car. We still have many photos of the people of the community and schools. Her family, the Williams and Greens, as well as their house and formal rooms in the house, were greatly photographed.  I could do several books just on the photos of the children and how people dressed in the Teens and Twenties of the 1900s.  Farms, livestock, and people at work are shown through her camera lens.

George Green, her only child, was humbled when he told me how many hundreds of glass negatives he, Cliff Field, and other buddies destroyed when target practicing with guns and rocks. I hadn’t realize that she must have made some money from selling post cards of some of her photos. Charles Sweeting, a postcard collector, and historian, from Minetto, explained to me that she must have sent some of her photos to Germany. There they were made into postcards (some colored, some black and white) and she must have taken them around to stores to sell. In the 1920’s and 30’s, she often sent photos into the Syracuse Herald or Post Standard where she regularly won a dollar or two and they were published in the Sunday paper.


William L. Blaisdell

William L. Blaisdell
1846
Oct 17 – 1941 Feb 13

William L. Blaisdell of Martville, the lone surviving veteran of the Civil War from Cayuga County died at his home on February 13, 1941 after a five week illness. Comrade Blaisdell was 94 years of age.

His birthday was annually celebrated in lively fashion by members of the Sons of Union Veterans of Auburn and members of other patriotic and civic organizations of Auburn participating. He was in the finest of health and spirits on the occasion of his 94th birthday and he looked forward to many more, hoping to reach the century mark. He had often been feted by Auburn Rotary Club. Continue reading “William L. Blaisdell”


Don Richardson

A great friend to Fair Haven History

In his youth, Don Richardson spent his summers at his family’s cottage on Little Sodus Bay. Before he as born, his parents Raymond and Dora Sours Richardson, had served as Principal and Preceptress of Fair Haven High School for two years (1919-1921). After moving to Perry, New York where Don grew up, the family returned to Fair Haven during the summer months. Their cottage was next door to that of Raymond T. Sant, whose love of history and story telling made an impression on Don.

Don H. Richardson was born in Rochester, New York,  March 12, 1929. He graduated magna cum laude with a degree in History from Hobart College in 1951. He followed in his father’s footsteps with a career in education. Through Ray Sant’s mentoring and recommendation, he secured his first teaching job. He went on to earn a Masters Degree from Syracuse University and his Ph.D. from Columbia University. For more then 30 years he served as principal of Valhalla High School in Westchester County, New York. Continue reading “Don Richardson”