What follows is a selection of
newspaper articles that commemorated the Town's anniversary celebration.
A special thanks to the Daily Freeman, The Woodstock Times
and The Ulster County Townsman for granting their permission to
present these articles on this web site.
The 'Sunday Freeman' Sunday
March 28,1999 by Pat Rowe
175 Years of history bring pride
and joy to Olive residents.
CD-ROM offers look at Town's Past:
West Shokan - The Town of Olive was
chartered in 1823, made up of hardworking people who opted to carve
their economic support and lives from what the Catskills provided them.
The first town meeting was held in May of the following year. This year
on May 4, the town celebrates the 175th anniversary of that event.
Town officials will dress in period costume while conducting a
modern-day Town Board meeting at the Olivebridge Fire hall , and they
will unveil a town of Olive historical quilt which is still being made.
Residents also will be able to take some of Olive's history home in the
form of a computer CD-ROM that tells the towns story in word song and
pictures.
Called "Country Tears, City Water," copies of the CD will be available
for $20 each, with the proceeds going to the restoration of the
Olive & Hurley Old School Baptist Meeting House.
"I'm really excited about the CD and the planned event for May," said
Eric Winchell, one of the organizers of the meeting house restoration.
"I think this CD is the first multimedia presentation for this are, and
I'm excited about all the work and energy (Town Clerk) Sylvia Rozzelle
and all the other people have volunteered to the project."
The Olive & Hurley Old School Baptist Meeting House is on state Route
28, opposite Winchell's Corners. The restoration effort began in earnest
in 1998, and the fund-raising for a roof replacement has been ongoing
for several months. The building has been designated a state historical
site.
Rozzelle said the idea for the CD-ROM came about when Alan Maskell
approached her about volunteering to create a World Wide Website for the
town.
"We already have a Web page and I just sort of sat here in the office
and threw out a thought about the May 4 event, the history of Olive and
could something like that be put on a CD for computer. ... I had no
knowledge if it could," Rozzelle said. "Alan just listened to me and
then said it could. here we are, at this point with this wonderful
project almost completed thanks to many volunteers."
Rozzelle narrated and produced the CD-ROM with technical help from
Maskell; Eliza Praetorius, owner of Earthworks in Kingston; and Heidi A.
Lee of HAL designs of Shokan. All provided their services at no cost to
the town, and financial contributions from Olive residents William
Golden, Helen Jeffs, Chet Lyons Jr. and Nancy Silvestri as well as town
Supervisor Berndt Leifeld.
The Opening of the CD-ROM is chilling. Strains from a fiddle played by
West Shokan musician Dorraine Schofield provides the background as
Rozzelle's voice provides descriptions of the town before the
construction of the Ashokan Reservoir from 1908-15, the dramatic
feelings that came with the first shovel full of dirt that uprooted
residents and the resiliency of the townspeople.
"It is with pride and respect we applaud these strong, resilient people
whose suffering and country tears filled the Ashokan Reservoir,"
Rozzelle says. "Their monumental sacrifices to provide New York with
city water created the foundation for New York City to develop into one
of the greatest cities in the world."
Rozzelle said the CD-ROM was not created to criticize the New York City
Board of Water Supply; in fact it is complimentary of the city, she
said. It also provides a pictorial history of the town before the
reservoir - it's hamlets, bridges, tanneries, waterfalls, schools and
churches. Rozzelle takes the viewer on a tour of the towns history,
introducing people and places that no longer exist.
Tobe Carey of Glenford volunteered to help with the video segments, and
West Shokan resident Amy Fradon sings songs that were written during the
construction of the reservoir and printed at the time in a songbook by
the Board of Water Supply.
"I am really loving this," said Pretorius, the Earthworks owner. " I
worked on something similar several years ago-not a CD but historical
documentation in another form in Saugerties. The finished product was
"Toodlum Tales." What I see with this project is the same collective
energy. The old photos of the town of Olive are simply beautiful and the
story is said, but beautiful. "Building CD's is what I do for a
profession and this has been simply a wonderful experience to help tell
the story of this little town," she said.
The 'Sunday Freeman' Sunday
April 25,1999 by Pat Rowe
Mornings have been busy
lately at the Olivebridge Methodist Church, where several women are
putting the finishing touches on the Town of Olive Historical Quilt. 'It
has to be completed by April 28,' said Town Clerk Sylvia Rozzelle. 'It
will be moved from the church and there will be a private viewing for
all who worked on the 32 squares and the quilt project. Then, on May 4,
the quilt will be presented to the public. The town will celebrate its
175th year that day with a community celebration at the Olivebridge,
Fire Hall, beginning at 7:30 p.m. Rozzelle, town Supervisor Berndt
Leifeld, the deputy town clerk and council members will be dressed in
period costumes for a Town Board meeting, and people who worked on the
quilt will be wearing special identification ribbon. The quilt will be
displayed as a symbol of community pride. The Town also will sell
copies, of a CD-ROM on the history of Olive, called 'Country Tears,
City. Water," for $20 apiece. The proceeds will benefit the renovation
of the Old School Baptist Church. There are a limited number of CD- ROMs
available, and Rozzelle is taking orders in her office at (914)
657-2320. 'The CD is awesome and could not have been accomplished
without the efforts of several people with a lot of technical knowledge,
Rozzelle said. 'They have volunteered because they love what we are
doing to preserve the history of this town. The quilt project is equally
as awesome and is a real community effort.' Rozzelle said "when ideas
about what to do for anniversary tribute were in their infancy, she
thought about a quilt because her parents had done something similar in
their home state of Kentucky.
During a social event, she mentioned the thought to Shirley Sampson and
Bette Cady, two local quilters who assured Rozzelle the project could be
accomplished. Sampson, described as one of the fastest quilters in town,
said she is 'not fancy, but fast." 'This is a very special quilt,' she
said. 'It is part of our history. I've been quilting for 50 years. My
grandmother, Bessie Davis, probably taught me originally, and I've been
quilting with the women of this church for many years. I've been member
of this church for between 50 and 60 years. It is so relaxing and so
quiet to quilt.' The history of other quilts made at the church at least
since 1967 - is recorded in a quilt diary kept by the quilters. It
includes information about fabric, colors, price, for whom the quilt was
being made and who worked on it. Sampson is working on the final quilt
process but also designed and quilted a square in honor of the
Olivebridge Methodist Church. She said Bishop Falls, the subject of
another square, is part of her heritage and she attended the Tongore
School, which is featured on yet another square. Cady shared her
memories in two squares - one of the George Van Kleeck Blacksmith shop
and one of the Traver Hollow Bridge. Margaret Wendt, at 87 the project's
oldest quitter, said she quilted a square of the Shokan Reformed Church,
where she has been a member for 75 years. Born in Broadhead Bridge
before the completion of the Ashokan Reservoir, Wendt said she is glad
the historical quilt is being made. Page Chase, the 14-year-old niece of
Councilwoman Helen Chase, designed a quilt square of the house in which
she and father Sherret Chase live. Helen Chase provided the sewing, but
Page plans to go to the church and try her hand at quilting. 'This house
(the Peter Winchell home) is part of the history of this mountain,' Page
said. 'It is about 200 years old, and although it is being renovated,
the original lines are still obvious.' Nancy Silvestri, owner of
Creative Spirit, an Olivebridge craft store, has been so intrigued with
a stone house (also a Winchell house) down the road from her shop that
she sketched it, and created a square for the community quilt. In
Samsonville, Racine Shurter recreated the family grist mill in fabric.
"This idea was taken from a 1920 photograph," Shurter said. "Much of the
mill as is seen in the square was taken during a flood in 1928. The
grist mill was the lower mill, and the upper mill was a heading and
shingle mill. 'Samsonville had electric well before much of the other
areas,' Shurter added. 'There was a turbine between the upper and lower
mills which provided the energy for the electric. 'This quilt is a
wonderful community project,' she said. 'There just isn't enough of that
anymore.' One recent morning, 86- year-old Teresa Posclueny of
Boiceville stopped in to take a quick peek at the project. After
listening to Sampson say she hoped the quilt could be displayed at the
county and state fairs and other places of interest, Posclueny strongly
interjected her opinion. 'It needs to be at the Smithsonian, it needs to
be photographed for The New York Times,' she said. 'This is a
part of local history that doesn't exist anymore. This is life, the way
it should be, not like ' the stuff that is happening today.
Freeman Photo by Bill
Madden
The 'Ulster County Townsman'
Thursday April 29, 1999 by Marian Umhey
175TH ANNIVERSARY! Congratulations to
the Town of Olive which will soon celebrate its 175th Anniversary! The
festivities will take place on Tuesday, May 4th, with a community fete
at the Olivebridge Fire Hall, starting at 7:30pm. Town Supervisor Berndt
(Bert) Leifeld, Town Clerk Sylvia Rozzelle, the deputy town clerk and
the four councilmen will be dressed in period costumes for a Town Board
meeting.
The beautiful and intricate 'Town of Olive Historical Quilt,' on which a
number of local women have worked diligently for several months, will be
on display at the celebration, and those who worked on the quilt will be
wearing special identification ribbons. The quilt was the inspiration of
retired local Postmaster Virginia (Shirley) Sampsen and Bette Cady. Mrs.
Sampsen's late grandmother, Bessie Davis, taught her to quilt as a young
girl. Shirley designed and quilted a square in honor of the Olivebridge
Methodist Church. She said that Bishop Falls, the subject of another
square, is part of her heritage and that she had attended the Tongore
School, which is featured in yet another square.
Mrs. Cady shares her memories in two squares - one of the George Van
Kleeck Blacksmith shop and one of the Traver Hollow Bridge.
Eighty-seven-year-old Margaret Wendt, the project's oldest quilter,
divulged that she had designed and executed a square depicting the
Shokan Reformed church, where she has been a member for seventy- five
years. Born in the community of Broadhead Bridge, which disappeared
during the construction of the Ashokan Reservoir, Mrs. Wendt stated she
is glad the historical quilt is being made.
Fourteen-year-old Page Chase, daughter of Olive Councilman Helen Chase,
designed a quilt square of the house in which she and her father,
Sherret Chase, reside.
Nancy Silvestri of Olivebridge and Racine Shurter of Samsonville also
created squares. Nancy's was of another Winchell stone house and
Racine's was of the family grist mill.
Theresa Poseluzny of Boiceville was very enthusiastic about the project
and even recommended that it be placed in the Smithsonian Museum in
Washington, D.C.
The 'The Woodstock Times' May 6,
1999 by Jay Braman Jr.
175 Years Young Olive marks it's
founding... As the mastermind and creative force behind this week's
packed-to-the-rafters 175th anniversary of Olive, Town Clerk Sylvia
Rozzelle -spent much of Tuesday evening thanking and congratulating the
dozens of volunteers who helped on all the projects developed to honor
the Town. Among the projects were the town's historical quilt, a
wall-sized work that depicts 32 scenes from around the community, and
the CD-ROM of
town history, a multi-media journey from the days before the Ashokan
Reservoir was built to present-day satellite images of the town. And
then there was Tuesday's. commemorative Town Board session at the
Olivebridge fire hall, which featured a fully costumed town board
arriving on horseback, live music, food and historical displays
surrounding the room.
"It was an incredible community project and I thank you all," said
Rozzelle. But many people in the room knew that without the efforts of
the popular Rozzelle the event probably wouldn't have happened.
With hundreds in attendance, Rozzelle's friend Kate McLaughlin described
Rozzelle as a positive role model, saying she knew Rozzelle "was my kind
of people" when she saw her at a local softball game rooting for her
team while shaking a cowbell. McLaughlin thanked Rozzelle for her hard
work and dedication saying, "I can't think of anybody who has spent more
time loving a Town."
Congressman Maurice Hinchey sent his district representative Kevin
O'Connell to the meeting to hand Town Supervisor Bert Leifeld an
American flag that flew over the Capitol, and Assemblyman Kevin Cahill
sent congratulations as did state Senator John Bonacic, whose aide,
Susan Cummings, read a Senate resolution honoring Olive.
Ulster County Legislature, Chairman Daniel Alfonso said that people like
Rozzelle and,Town Board members Leifeld, Bruce LaMonda, James Ulrich,
Helen Chase and John Hansen deserve more recognition for what they do.
"The greatest gift of life is serving other people; that's why they do
it. They want to help their community," said Alfonso.
As a gesture of goodwill, New York City representative William Stasiuk,
who heads the city's local watershed protection efforts, offered the
town several framed photographs taken around Olive before the reservoir
was built almost a century ago. 'About halfway through the history of
the town the city came and created great disruption on your town," he
told the audience. Stasiuk said the photo's were a small token of
appreciation from Joel Meile, the commissioner of the city Department of
Environmental Protection. Stasiuk also said that even though the
relationship between the town and the city is at times "strained," the
two municipalities have at least learned over the years how to work,
together in a mutually respectful way.
The morning following the meeting and celebration'Rozzelle was back in
her office with her dog, CJ, a black lab she saved from being killed
last year. As CJ munched on dog biscuits in his bed under her desk,
three people were in her office, each wanting different things, the town
assessor was on hold and Rozzelle was finishing up some business with
"the meals on wheels guy." Unfazed, Rozzelle was able to run to her car
for the information she needed to identify for a reporter the name of a
man in a photograph donated to the town the night before by local
history buff Eric Winchell. The man turned out to be Lemuel Boice,
Supervisor in 1858, who was shown just after winning the election by one
vote. Winchell drew laughs at the ceremony when he read aloud Boice's
favorite saying: "You do what I say; if it's wrong it will be right
anyway."
Rozzelle, who has been town clerk for the past 15 years, laughs and says
she wants to blow up the sIogan up to poster size and hang it on her
wall. Then it's back to business. ++ Jay Braman Jr.
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