The Victrola
by Phoenix Andrews, Curator AssistantA few weeks ago while looking through some off site collections I came across a beautiful standing phonograph. With seemingly no visible accession number (that...
View Article2023: A Year in Review
By Rachel Dworkin, ArchivistWhen people ask me what I do, I tell them I am an archivist. When they stare at me blankly, I explain that it’s a subspecies of librarian. The job of a librarian is to...
View ArticleA Tale of Two Brothers: Catch Him if you Can
by Susan Zehnder, Education DirectorThis is a story about two brothers who made a name for themselves. One became a well-regarded member of the local community, while the other went on to make national...
View ArticleThe Great Move
by Phoenix Andrews, Curatorial AssistantHow do you move over 500 objects? 12 weeks ago, I joined CCHS to work on a project we nicknamed “The Great Move." The project, the relocation of items from an...
View Article100 Years of History
By Erin Doane, Senior CuratorOn November 7, 1923, the Elmira chapter of the Sons of the American Revolution held a meeting. At that meeting, the organization’s president Dr. Arthur W. Booth proposed...
View ArticleAce Photographer
By Rachel Dworkin, archivist Over the years, I must have seen the logo of Ace Photo Studio on the back of a hundred photos in our collection, but I didn’t know much about the studio or George “Ace”...
View ArticleThe Demise of the Beneficial Order of Earnest Workers
by Susan Zehnder, Education Director Every day when opening our social media accounts, we discover new scams aimed at tempting us to send money or provide personal information. Despite filters, and...
View ArticleAn Artist’s Artist: Julius Lars Hoftrup
by Erin Doane, Senior CuratorTwo different donors recently gave us paintings by Lars Hoftrup. One donated three watercolors and the other a single oil on board. It felt like an odd coincidence that...
View ArticleTrue Crime Reporting
By Rachel Dworkin, Archivist On March 15, 1964, 12-year-old Mary Theresa Simpson went missing after heading home from her cousin’s house. After a few hours of waiting, her father called the police. For...
View ArticleStand up for Safety: Aviator Leon "Windy" Smith
by Susan Zehnder, Education Director “It is mighty easy Mr. Praeger for you to sit in your swivel chair in Washington and tell the flyers when they can fly…”Windy Smith in the cockpitWhen Leon D....
View ArticleMay Day at Elmira College
by Erin Doane, Senior Curator May Day is an ancient spring festival that originated in Europe to rejoice in the coming of summer. In 1902, Dean M. Anstice Harris started what would become a 65-year...
View ArticleA Listing of Local Photographers
By Rachel Dworkin, ArchivistsThere were almost 50 photography studios in operation in Chemung County during the 19th century. For much of that century, there were no amateur photographers. Taking and...
View ArticleFly the Friendly Skies? The First African American Stewardess
By Susan Zehnder, Education DirectorDo you remember Mohawk Airlines? The “Route of the Air Chiefs” airline carried passengers all around New York State. It was one of the first feeder airlines to take...
View ArticleThe American Hellenic Educational Progressive Association
by Erin Doane, Senior CuratorIn June 1955, nearly 1,000 people attended the 19th annual district convention of the American Hellenic Educational Progressive Association (AHEPA) at the Mark Twain Hotel...
View ArticleOperation Elmira
By Rachel Dworkin, archivistOn D-Day, June 6, 1944, just as the sun was setting, two waves of Douglas C-47s towing Horsa and Waco CG-4A gliders flew east over Utah Beach in Normandy, France. They were...
View ArticleElmira's Fire Chief John H. Espey
By Susan Zehnder, Education DirectorImagine knowing what you want to do from a young age and then doing it for half a century. One such determined man was Elmira fire fighter John H. Espey. First...
View ArticleSwimming in Wool
by Erin Doane, Senior CuratorThere’s nothing better on a hot summer day than taking a dip in some nice cool water. For centuries people have used lakes, rivers, oceans, and pools to help beat the heat....
View ArticleThe Diarists of the 107th New York Volunteers
By Rachel Dworkin, ArchivistThe past is a foreign country, but, if you’re really lucky, you might just find a pen pal. As archivist at the Chemung County Historical Society, it is one of my great, and...
View ArticleAt the Corners of Church and Main Streets
by Erin Doane, Senior CuratorMap of the City of Elmira from actual surveys by G.M. Hopkins, C.E., 1865Jervis Langdon was an entrepreneur, an abolitionist, a philanthropist, and the father-in-law of...
View ArticleNew Project with the Smithsonian
by Susan Zehnder, Education DirectorThere is no life that is not geographic.-Ruth Wilson GilmoreI heard this statement back in July at a workshop for the first group of educators involved in a new...
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