Volume 12.2 Summer 2010 has articles on Nick Juried’s recollections of his family buying a farm in Gilboa in the early 1940s; four articles on the importance of cauliflower to the agriculture of the area by the 1850 Farmer’s Every-day Book, Diane Galusha, Bill Snyder, and a reprinted “obituary” for cauliflower from the 1978 Mirror Recorder; the yet-to-be-named trails on the mountaintops of Gilboa, Jefferson, Stamford, and Harpersfield by Velga Kundzins-Tan; Maude Haskin’s recollections from the 50s; another of the letters that Jeremiah and David Reed wrote home from the Civil War [ Note: we have heard from the family and hope to have more on the families of these Union soldiers in future newsletters]); folklore and folknames of Gilboa and Conesville; copyright issues for people dealing in local issues; a celebration of the new Juried Memorial Barn (an addition to our Gilboa Museum to house agricultural history); and an overview of the archeological digs conducted by the New York City Department of Environmental Protection.
Download Quarterly in PDF formatGHS Newsletter 12.2 Summer 2010
GHS Newsletter 12.2 Summer 2010