news

Medina student attends select ag program in Iowa

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 31 July 2014 at 12:00 am

Photo by Tom Rivers – Adam Eick, right, is pictured with his FFA advisor and teacher Todd Eick of Medina during last week’s Orleans County 4-H Fair. The two are cousins.

MEDINA – A conference in Iowa assembled 49 outstanding agriculture students from 26 states in a highly competitive program. One of those students, Adam Eick, is from Medina and looks forward to running his own farm someday.

He attended the New Century Farmer Program from July 14-18 in Johnston, Iowa, learning about the global marketplace, farm financing, demographic trends and risk management. Eick was able to network with other emerging farmers and experience some of the latest developments in agriculture technology.

“I see a bright future in the ag industry,” Eick said. “This conference solidified that because people have to eat.”

Eick, 19, is entering his sophomore year at Morrisville State College. He plays offensive lineman on the college’s football team.

Eick is from a dairy farming family. This summer he is a paid intern at Lamb Farms in Oakfield, working in the herd health program.

He was the only student from New York picked for the New Century program. Todd Eick, Adam’s teacher and FFA advisor at Medina, gave Adam a strong endrosement for the program.

“It was a great opportunity for Adam,” said Mr. Eick, who is Adam’s cousin. “He is a young man with a bright future. It’s been nice watching him grow up from a little boy to the young man he is becoming.”

Adam said he may move out West after college to work and perhaps own his own farm.

“There’s something about the Midwest that gets me excited about agriculture,” he said.

Albion teen leads humanitarian initiative in Uganda

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 31 July 2014 at 12:00 am

Joyce LaLonde spends 6 weeks in Africa

Provided photos – Joyce LaLonde talks to a Primary School about the construction and importance of pit latrines as part of a sanitation and hygiene campaign.

ALBION – Joyce LaLonde spent six weeks this summer in Africa, digging holes for latrines, giving presentations to Ugandan women about family planning, and connecting with local officials and other humanitarian organizations.

LaLonde is only 18 and just finished her freshman year at Syracuse University, where she is double majoring in international relations and broadcast and digital journalism. She led a group of 13 other Syracuse students on the project through the Nourish International humanitarian organization based in Chapel Hill, N.C.

The Syracuse University students, including LaLonde in front row at left, are pictured on the last day of work with half the group wearing Nourish International shirts, and others wearing Global Health Network of Uganda shirts.

The work in Uganda convinced LaLonde that she wants to be involved in international service work.

“This is definitely what I see myself doing,” she said. “This is something I’ve always been passionate about, seeing everyone around the globe as sisters and brothers.”

Her team from Syracuse worked with local Ugandan residents and the Global Health Network of Uganda. LaLonde said the Syracuse students were focused on doing sustainable projects that would be maintained long after the students left. (To see a 5-minute video about what they did, click here.)

They worked with residents to build three latrines for families with disabled members. They dug 20 -foot holes for the bathrooms. LaLonde and the team made small structures of concrete and bricks.

Students work hand-in-hand with community members to build a latrine.

The team made drying racks after using machetes to cut bamboo. They made washing stations and garbage pits.

The Syracuse team included 13 young women and only one man. LaLonde has experience in humanitarian projects. She went on a church mission trip in April 2013 for 10 days in Peru. She went with her youth group at the First Presbyterian Church in Albion for another project in Michigan.

The trip to Uganda was much longer, and LaLonde said the six-week commitment is a minimum to build relationships and trust with the local residents.

“You definitely need time to make a sustainable impact,” she said.

Nourish International members lead family planning education with women in Aber Village, Uganda.

The Syracuse group made a two-year commitment to the community in the Oyam District of northern Uganda. LaLonde and her team will be back next summer.

A group of Syracuse students last fall pushed to start a Nourish International chapter. They moved quickly to arrange and organize the trip to Uganda, partnering with the Global Health Network Uganda. Nourish International is not affiliated with a church.

“It’s service work,” LaLonde said. “It’s putting others before yourself.”

A representative from University of Southern California, Syracuse University (Joyce LaLonde – third from left), local government members, and GHN(U) executive director cut ribbon to officially begin partnership.

The students wanted to work in Africa. LaLonde said the culture has always fascinated her.

She was in charge of recruiting and training students for the trip. The group also raised $7,000 for its supplies in building the latrines and other projects. Each student also had to raise the money to cover their airfare and expenses. LaLonde said many in the Albion community helped her with those costs.

besides the physical projects in Uganda, students also led sessions with the Ugandans about sanitation and hygiene, financial literacy, sexual and reproductive health, and business education for women’s groups.

LaLonde was impressed by the sense of community in Uganda. The students were there during prime farming season. Ugandans got up early to work on their farms at 6 a.m. After working with their crops, they then pitched in to dig the latrine holes and complete other physically challenging projects.

The Syracuse group arrived on May 25 and stayed until July 6.

“I had a great team and we met a lot of incredible people,” LaLonde said.

One of the beneficiaries of the project accepts a bucket from Joyce LaLonde at the closing ceremony of the partnership.

United Way director leaving Orleans for job at RIT

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 31 July 2014 at 12:00 am

Lisa Ireland is first director for merged Orleans agency

File photo by Tom Rivers – Lisa Ireland, executive director for the United Way of Orleans County, joins campaign chairman Charlie Nesbitt last Sept. 11 in unveiling the $325,000 fund-raising goal. Ireland served as the United Way executive director the past three years.

MEDINA She led two Orleans County United Way charters through a merger, helped the combined organization raise hundreds of thousands of dollars for local agencies and spearheaded a “Day of Caring” on Sept. 11.

Lisa Ireland said it has been an honor to serve as executive director of the United Way of Orleans County the past three years. But she is leaving the position next month to take a job at the Rochester Institute of Technology. She will be working in the development office, raising money for scholarships.

The United Way in Orleans used to have Eastern Orleans and Western Orleans chapters. Now they are unified with an office in Medina. The United Way set a campaign goal last September to raise $325,000 for 20 different agencies.

“It’s an amazing, amazing job,” Ireland said. “With 20 agencies you see a whole variety of different work. You’re able to touch a lot of lives.”

The United Way is seeking a new director. Candidates should send their resume and cover letter to Bill Hungerford, board chairman at wgh@takeform.net. For more information on the position, click here to go to the United Way website.

Ireland said she will be available through the end of August to help with the transition to a new director. It’s a busy time for the agency as it plans for a new fund-raising campaign and also the Day of Caring on Sept. 11. On that day volunteers go out and work with many community service projects.

“We purposely chose Sept. 11 wanting to turn a day of tragedy into something positive,” Ireland said.

Ireland grew up in Albion and lives in Brockport. She was just elected president of the Board of Education in Brockport. Prior to the United Way, she was director of the Genesee-Orleans Ministry of Concern and the development director of Hospice of Orleans.

“I’ve worked 12 years in human services in Orleans County,” she said. “It’s been such an honor to work with everyone in Orleans County.”

Lions Club helped keep downtown Albion clean a half century ago

Posted 31 July 2014 at 12:00 am

By Bill Lattin, Orleans County Historian

ALBION – Back around 1960 the Albion Lions Club provided trash barrels for downtown Albion. They were painted silver with black letters stating, “Help Keep Albion Clean.”

Shown here, from left, are Kenneth Scharett from Scharett & Mitchell Funeral Home; “Ted” Church, an attorney from Church and Church; and Mayor John D. Robinson.

The A & P Food Store shows in back of Ken Scharett’s head while “Jack” Robinson wipes the can clean.

Medina adds apple-themed bike racks

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 30 July 2014 at 12:00 am

Photos by Tom Rivers

MEDINA – Cyclists in downtown Medina have new spots to tie up their bikes. The Medina Business Association paid for two new bike racks that are shaped like apples.

The Medina Department of Public Works installed the bike racks on Main Street on Monday. A larger bike rack, also shaped like an apple, will soon be set up in the Canal Basin.

“We wanted something that was representative of our area,” said Cindy Robinson, president of the MBA. “We love the design.”

The Business Association worked with Orleans-Niagara BOCES students on the projects. Students submitted designs and fabricated the bike racks. F & H Metal Finishing in Medina painted the bike racks, which were paid with proceeds from MBA events.

Robinson said more of the bike racks could be added to the downtown in the future.

Albion students can earn extra credit by reading over summer

Posted 30 July 2014 at 12:00 am

Photos by Sue Cook – Chris Keller watches the game while middle school librarian Jodi Brady has Claire Squicciarini and Logan Conlon roll the dice to pick their next books.

By Sue Cook, staff reporter

ALBION – The Fizz, Boom, Read summer reading program continues in the Hoag Library. The program is designed to encourage reading through the opportunity to earn prizes, but Albion has a little extra incentive to draw in students.

Albion students that participate in the summer reading program earn the opportunity for extra credit toward their September English class.

Wednesday nights from 5 to 8 p.m. English Department Chair Chris Keller, along with Albion teachers and the middle school librarian, gather in the teen room at Hoag. Students are welcome to come play a monopoly-like board game which helps guide book choices or independently pick their own reading material. After completing a book, students earn tickets based on their goals to enter into drawings for prizes.

Goals are diverse and offer options for kids to be able to freely pick almost anything they would like to read. Sample goals include reading a newspaper or a book from a series.

“Our goal is to get kids to read,” said Keller. “We want this to be flexible and offer choices in a game atmosphere. The idea was to partner with the local library, raise the kids’ awareness, and turn up the volume on reading.”

The colored spaces offer kids a chance to read a book in the genre listed such as mythology (non-fiction), biography, science fiction or horror for two tickets. Players can also choose to ignore the space and pick a book outside the genre for one ticket instead.

“I love libraries,” Keller added. “I always say I grew up in the library. I am a relatively successful person and I attribute a lot of my success to my public library. It really was a great resource and helped me develop my love of reading.”

Besides just a refresher in reading, the program’s tie into Fizz, Boom, Read means that science and math are incorporated into the program as well. Students that play the board game are quizzed on the periodic table of elements, but also can answer questions about the Latin origin of the words, the history of the elements and the people who discovered them. Correct answers can lead to more prize tickets.

The library also offers opportunities to come in during the regular summer reading program hours on Mondays and Thursdays from 2 to 7 p.m. This gives more flexibility to parents who may not be able to bring their children during the Wednesday hours.

The program is a collaboration between the school and library, which is targeted mostly toward sixth through ninth graders, although any child in the middle or high school is encouraged to participate. Donated prizes to help entice young readers include Kindles, tablets, ice cream party and pizza party supplies, school supplies and gift cards.

The English credit that students earn is factored as extra credit into their Common Core grades. For students that may be struggling, this program could be the difference between pass and fail.

Keller explained that kids lose information over the summer. Reading helps to retain some of the information and can close the gap between children that have a socio-economic advantage over others. Students that have participated in the summer reading programs have shown better scores and overall reading ability when they return to regular classes.

“We knew we had to close the gap, but we also had to fight the summer drop-off,” said Keller.

“We need to get back into the idea that reading is a necessity,” he said, commenting that some homes don’t even have books in them. “Our students leave high school now and are not prepared for college.”

Students can join the reading program at any time. There are still a few weeks left to participate to receive credit toward English class and earn prize tickets. Even a student that only attends a couple of sessions can benefit greatly from the program.

Younger readers and adults can also take part in the library’s regular reading program. The entire program will conclude on Aug. 21 with an ice cream social for all participants.

Fishermen give shallow Glenwood Lake a shot

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 30 July 2014 at 12:00 am

Photos by Tom Rivers

MEDINA – Two fishermen from Depew were in Medina today for the first time in 20 years, determined to catch bass at Glenwood Lake.

Don Chadwick and Jeff Becker remember fishing at the lake when they were in their teens. They arrived this morning to find the lake’s water level had dropped 2 feet. The boat launch is closed while the lake level has been reduced so emergency repairs can be made to a manhole at the Medina’s sewer plant.

The two fishermen said they were given permission by police to venture into the water because their bass boat has a small engine.

The lake levels are expected to return to normal beginning on Thursday after the repairs are made to the manhole.

A crew works on the sewer plant system for the village of Medina.

Summer park program is in final week with lots to do at Albion

Posted 30 July 2014 at 12:00 am

From the Albion Parks

By John Grillo, Albion Recreation Program director

Last week was another week of growth and success for the Summer Parks Program. We had very good attendance at each park.

On Monday the wrestling camp started with a great group of campers learning new maneuvers, skills, technique and doing live wrestling. On Tuesday, the parks conducted special events and activities that all the children seemed to enjoy. On Wednesday, The Genesee-Orleans Youth Bureau came to Bullard Park with a nutrition lesson and organized several games.

On Thursday, the parks were bused to the Orleans County Fair. While at the Fair, the children observed a dog obedience show, horse show contest, visited all the sections of animals, walked through all the exhibits and enjoyed the food vendors. On Friday, the parks had a pizza party. That day was “Take your Parent or Grandparent Day to the Parks.”

Due to the hot temperatures earlier in the week, each park had water activities. A blow-up wading pool, slip and slide and old fashion water games were very popular those days. Other activities this week included the children’s favorite game of dodge ball and whiffleball. Many children played old school games such as rubber quoits, table tennis and carom pool. These fun and competitive activities have been in the summer parks program for several years.

The 13 Park Supervisors continue to do a wonderful job of supervising, directing and maintaining a fun and safe place to be. Caitlin Francis, continued to do a great job with the arts and crafts at all the parks throughout the week.

This week there is a Volleyball Camp that starts at 9 am at the High School and continues all week through Friday. On Wednesday (today), the Recreation Department will be sponsoring a Senior Citizens Day Picnic along with a Park Picnic for the children. All park children will meet at Bullard Park for the fun filled day.

(The Senior Citizen’s Day Picnic will go from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the east end pavilion at Bullard Park in Albion. All Senior Citizens are welcome to attend. Senior Citizens are urged to bring a dish to pass and optional place setting. The menu will include hot dogs, hamburgers, pop, chicken wings, pizza, and treats. There will be some fun games and activities provided, if you wish to participate. The Village of Albion Recreation Department sponsors the picnic.)

Thursday will be Arts and Crafts Day along with organized water games. All types of games, musical activities, and low keyed competition will be conducted at all three parks as well. Friday will conclude the summer parks program for the season. These fun activities are still available for anyone wishing to register at any of the three village parks for the final week.

Remember to keep an eye open for the “Spray Water Park” project meetings. That would be a great facility for children and adults in and around the community.

Cobblestone Museum has 6 outhouses, including former governor’s

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 30 July 2014 at 12:00 am

Photos by Tom Rivers

GAINES – The cobblestone structures get a lot of the attention – as they should – at the Cobblestone Society Museum, but the museum also includes six outhouses, including the one used by Rufus Bullock and his family.

(In the top photo, museum co-director Sarah Karas is pictured with the Bullock outhouse, which is located behind the Ward House next to the Cobblestone Church.)

Bullock grew up in Albion and went on to be the governor of Georgia during Reconstruction after the Civil War. He gained prestige as president of the Macon and Augusta Railroad in 1867. He was elected governor and served from 1868 to 1871. Bullock was an abolitionist and successfully fought accusations of corruption while he was governor in Georgia.

He returned to live out his life in Albion and is buried at Mount Albion Cemetery. His house still stands at the northwest corner of West Park and Liberty streets.

The Cobblestone Church was built in 1834 and is the oldest cobblestone church in North America. But it’s not the oldest structure on the museum grounds. That distinction goes to this outhouse that was erected in the early 1830s.

The finest of the six outhouses is this one, which has five seats inside. This outhouse is next to the Farmer’s Hall.

Take a look inside the five-seater.

Fair was blessed with great weather

Staff Reports Posted 30 July 2014 at 12:00 am

About 25,000 attended last week’s 4-H Fair

Provided photo – Royalty at the Orleans County 4-H Fair were crowned on Saturday with a brother and sister from Lyndonville – Ian and Jordyn Smith – picked as king and queen. They are pictured at right in the back row in this photo. Other royalty include, from left: Rachel Gregoire of Murray (duchess), Zach Moore of Albion (duke); Jacques Gregoire of Murray (prince) and his sister Grace Gregoire (princess).

KNOWLESVILLE – The Orleans County 4-H Fair dodged rain for nearly six days last week, leading to a turnout of about 25,000 people.

That is about average for the fair, which is one of the most successful small county fairs in the state, said Robert Batt, a 4-H educator. The Orleans County 4-H Fair draws the crowds without selling alcohol. The events are all youth and family oriented.

Saturday’s fair finale included the crowning of fair royalty. The following 4-H’ers were recognized:

A brother and sister from Lyndonville, Ian and Jordyn Smith, were crowned king and queen. Both Ian and Jordyn are long-time exhibitors in the rabbit area.

Zach Moore of Albion and Rachel Gregoire of Murray were named duke and duchess. Zach exhibits in the poultry and sheep animal areas as well as having several entries in the family and consumer science division. Rachel exhibits poultry and also had many exhibits in the family and consumer science division as well as being an integral part of running the building as a teen leader.

This year’s prince and princess were Jacques Gregoire and Grace Gregoire, another brother and sister team. Jacques and Grace both exhibit poultry and both dedicated many hours to working in both the family and consumer science building and the 4-H run food stands at the fair.

Medina library will accept school supplies in lieu of fines

Posted 29 July 2014 at 12:00 am

Press release, Lee-Whedon Memorial Library

MEDINA – Lee-Whedon Memorial Library will be accepting new school supplies in lieu of fines.

For every dollar owed in overdue fines up to $5, one new packaged item may be donated during the week of Aug. 4-8. We will continue to accept donations for the remainder of the month. However, those donations will not be counted towards fines.

All school supplies donated will benefit the children of the Medina Central School District.

Suggested donations include the following: pens, pencils, colored pencils, crayons, binders, rulers, folders, glue sticks, notebooks, scissors, pencil sharpeners, filler paper, markers, notebooks, scotch tape, and composition books.

The storm raged over Point Breeze

Staff Reports Posted 29 July 2014 at 12:00 am

Photo courtesy of Steven Wilson

POINT BREEZE – When the Weather Service predicted a big storm was coming on Sunday night, Steven Wilson of Albion knew where he wanted to be. He headed to the Bridges in Point Breeze.

Wilson, an aspiring professional photographer, positioned himself near a closed down bridge by Narby’s. He aimed his camera to the big bridge on Route 18 that stretches across the Oak Orchard River. He wanted to capture the lightning over a local landmark.

Photo courtesy of Steven Wilson

He also likes this photo of lightning in the clouds over the bridge.

Towns say they can cut Medina village taxes through shared services

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 29 July 2014 at 12:00 am

Shelby, Ridgeway decline dissolution, will look at savings through highway

Photos by Tom Rivers – Shelby Town Supervisor Merle “Skip” Draper, center, said the town will look at assuming some of Medina’s non-emergency services to see how that would affect the tax rate for village residents and town residents outside the village. Town Board members William Bacon, left, and Steve Seitz were also at a joint session among Shelby, Ridgeway and Medina officials.

MEDINA – Before the Village of Medina makes a radical change and dissolves – a move that could shave $6 off the village’s tax rate – the towns of Shelby and Ridgeway believe they can find significant savings for the village with shared services.

Shelby Town Supervisor Skip Draper wants to see how much villagers could save if the two towns took over the village’s highway services. The village already pays twice for the service: to the village and then to either Ridgeway or Shelby.

Draper noted that the town of Yates plows the village of Lyndonville’s roads. He thinks a similar arrangement could work for the village of Medina, which sits about halfway in Shelby and halfway in Ridgeway.

Medina Mayor Andrew Meier reluctantly supported the shared service pursuit. Meier said the issue was brought up before during doomed shared services discussions about two years ago. Meier said a dissolution plan already gives village taxpayers the $6 savings and spells out how current village services would be provided by either the towns, or local development corporations.

About 50 residents attended the meeting at Shelby Town Hall to watch 15 elected officials talk about possibly sharing more services among two towns and the village of Medina.

But Ridgeway and Shelby officials say they won’t talk about dissolution. That angered Meier, who said a committee and consultants worked for nearly a year on the plan.
“There has been a concerted effort to ignore the plan,” Meier said at a joint meeting Monday evening among the three boards.

He asked the two towns to correct “false statements” they have made publicly about the plan.

“That’s your opinion,” Draper responded.

Napoli said the two towns weren’t asked to helped shape the plan.

“That is your plan,” Napoli told Meier. “We were not asked to be involved.”

Meier shared an email from July 2013 that Napoli sent to Scott Sittig, the lead consultant for the plan from the Center for Governmental Research in Rochester. Napoli told Sittig that Ridgeway would not cooperate with the study because “it was a waste of taxpayer money and a waste of Town of Ridgeway employees’ time.”

Meier told Napoli he “removed himself from this process.”

Meier was chided by a mediator, Richard Moffit, for pressing dissolution and Meier’s perceived slights from the towns.

“You can’t keep bringing up the past,” Moffit said.

The highway discussions represented a good start in potential tax savings, he said.

Medina Village Trustee Mike Sidari urged the three local boards to find some common ground. He is joined by Trustee Marguerite Sherman of Medina, Mayor Andrew Meier, left, and Richard Moffit, right, who served as mediator at Monday’s meeting.

Ridgeway and Shelby officials said they wanted to focus on shared services, which can provide immediate relief to taxpayers, rather than a drawn-out process with dissolution. That plan called for creating an LDC to manage some services, create an ambulance district, a debt district and pass other services, including police, to the towns. Draper said it could take years to establish the new taxing entities.

“We should look at everything rather than create LDCs and new layers of government,” he said.

Draper took command of the meeting at times, offering to crunch the numbers and work with Shelby Town Highway Superintendent Mike Fuller about how the town could take over some of the village highway costs.

Draper asked Meier to provide the village’s non-emergency budget for costs outside of police, fire and ambulance. Draper said emergency services account for about $10 of the village $16.45 tax rate. He expects the towns could bring down the other $6-plus of the village tax rate by assuming some of the non-emergency services.

Meier said he would have those budget figures, as well as the revenues for each service, to the two towns by the end of the week.

Draper said he would determine potential cost savings to the village and cost increase to Shelby by the next joint session, which was scheduled for 7 p.m. on Sept. 2.

Meier said the cost impacts have already been spelled out in the dissolution plan. He returned to that document several times during Monday’s hour-long meeting, but town officials wouldn’t discuss the plan in detail.

Mary Woodruff, a Ridgeway councilwoman, said the community isn’t ready for dissolution. The shared services discussions could better prepare the community and the boards for a dissolution and perhaps a merger of the two towns, she said.

One Medina, a group headed by local attorney Nathan Pace with support from Meier, favors dissolving the village and merging the two towns. But Woodruff said that is premature right now.

Town leaders also want to look at how water and sewer services are provided among the three governments and try to find ways to reduce administration and costs for that service.

A long-awaited joint session among the Medina, Ridgeway and Shelby boards occurred on Monday at the Shelby Town Hall.

Draper said the local government leaders will have their work cut out if they are to make a significant change in the tax burden for the village.

“That $6 won’t just disappear with a magic wand,” he said. “There’s work you have to do.”

Meier has pressed for dissolution because he said the current village government isn’t sustainable. The tax base tends to shrink every year as housing values fall. That puts pressure on the village to raise the tax rate. The $16.45 per $1,000 of assessed property is one of the highest in the region. Villagers then have the added burden of paying a $3.04 rate to Ridgeway and $3.35 to Shelby for a combined town-village rate of nearly $20.

“The elephant in the room is the $16.45,” Draper acknowledged.

Dissolution would shift some costs to the two towns. But even with dissolution residents outside the village would pay far less in taxes than the village property owners.

The Ridgeway residents outside the village currently pay a $6.71 rate for town, lighting and fire protection. That would rise 46 percent to $9.83 if the village dissolves and services are picked up according to the plan.

Shelby residents would see a 10 percent increase with dissolution with the current rate for outside-village residents going from $8.36 per $1,000 of assessed property to $9.17. That would raise taxes for a $70,000 home from $585 to $642.

Meier said he wants to compare the impact to outside-village residents with the shared service possibilities and the dissolution plan. The dissolution plan should receive support from the towns, Meier said, if it proves the best way to reduce village taxes while minimizing an increase to the towns, and still maintaining services in the community.

County will put hitching post on courthouse lawn

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 29 July 2014 at 12:00 am

Provided photo – This undated photo, provided by Orleans County Historian Bill Lattin, shows the Courthouse Square in its pre-automobile days with hitching posts to tie up horses.

Photo by Tom Rivers – A hitching post will be installed sometime soon near the historical marker at the southwest corner of the courthouse lawn.

This hitching post is next to the home where Grace Bedell grew up on West State Street in Albion. Bedell is the girl who wrote a letter to Abraham Lincoln, encouraging him to grow a beard.

ALBION – The historic Courthouse Square will soon add an artifact from a bygone era.

The County Legislature has agreed to accept a hitching post from the Albion Main Street Alliance. The post will be added to the southeast corner of the courthouse lawn, likely in August, said Legislature Chairman David Callard.

The post will be located near a historical marker that was installed last July. That marker, with a log cabin logo, honors the pioneering spirit of Albion’s first residents. The marker recognizes William McAllister.

In December 1810, McAllister bought 368 acres in Albion, the east side of the village, from the Holland Land Company. The following year he built a log cabin where the current County Clerks’ Building stands next the county courthouse.

McAllister and his wife, known only in historical information as “Mrs. McAllister,” were Albion’s first settlers. The hitching post adds to that spirit of honoring the pioneers and early residents in the community. That was part of my message last week when I addressed the Legislature.

I showed them pictures of the many hitching posts and carriage steps in the community. I think Albion and Gaines have more of these survivors from the horse-and-buggy era than anywhere else. (I don’t think an inventory has ever been done to see which community has the most of these historical relics.)

Most of Albion’s hitching posts and carriage are on side streets. We don’t have too many along the state roads. AMSA is working with the village and now the county to have four hitching posts put back on Main Street. They will be set back off the state right of way. By having four in more prominent places on Main Street, we’ll be better able to promote the other sites that have hitching posts and carriage steps.

Many of them are in front of grand old houses from the 1800s or other historical sites, including the Cobblestone Society Museum and Mount Albion Cemetery.

I encouraged the Legislature to consider putting six to eight hitching posts along Main Street in front of the courthouse lawn, replicating the setup from the 1800s. I think we could find that many hitching posts or have them made.

I think the county could negotiate the placement with the state Department of Transportation, as long as the county assumes liability. I just wanted to put that idea out there for the county officials to mull over. For now I’m happy the Legislature will allow the one to go by the historical marker.

Zoo comes to Albion library

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 29 July 2014 at 12:00 am

Photos by Tom Rivers

ALBION – Youngsters at Hoag Library this afternoon look over a ferret, one of seven animals brought to the library from seven continents.

Robin Sanecki of the Buffalo Zoo holds a screech owl during the “World Safari” program at the library. About 200 people attended the event.

Sanecki holds an armadillo, which showed its ability to curl up into a ball.