You've seen the blue & yellow roadside markers around the area. Greenwich even has a few brown & white ones. But we don't have very many.
The state started the
historic marker program in 1926 to commemorate the sesquicentennial of the Declaration of Independence. The program continued, with state funding, through 1939. This explains why so many of the markers relate to the American Revolution, like the 2 below.
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Located on Dix Bridge Rd in Clarks Mills |
There are other historical markers around the town, but they were not put up by the state. State funding was removed from the program, but it was not abandoned. The state just decided that the municipalities should foot the bill for these expensive roadside sentinels.
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At the corner of Woodlawn Ave & Fisher St near the school |
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Near Dix Bridge at Hudson's Crossing in Clarks Mills |
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George Washington marker on US Rte 4 just before County Rte 77 |
Then we have some other markers. Like the plaque in Battneville put up by the Ondawa-Cambridge chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR). It is inserted into a stone wall & is nearly impossible to read from the road. The sign is easier to see, but it is still not a historic marker. Susan B. Anthony & her family need a proper marker at their former home.
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"EARLY HOME OF A GREAT WOMAN" the plaque reads |
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Sign outside the house on Route 29 in the hamlet of Battenville |
& what about those brown & white markers? Aside from being ugly, they are harder to read than the blue & yellow ones. Who put these up, & when?
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Not a very descriptive marker- along US Rte 4 near the Washington marker |
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Located at the intersection of County Rte 77 & Lick Springs Rd |
The long & short of it is that we could erect some more historic markers in the town without shelling out our hard earned cash. The
William G. Pomeroy Foundation has an historic roadside marker grant program. Starting on August 1, 2013 the grant application will be available for our region (APHNYS Region 5). If we choose a site or 2, & provide all of the necessary paperwork, we could receive the funding.
Any ideas? I was thinking the Anthony home in Battenville, the Main St. former site of the Free Church, founded in 1937 by Hiram Corliss, or the site of Union Village Academy.
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