• The Miles Theatre Apologizes

    The Miles Theatre Apologizes

    It’s not often that a theater takes out an ad apologizing for a show it has booked. But apparently Arthur Ungar, manager of The Miles Theater in Schenectady, felt the need to do so at the end of 1920. “‘Oh Girlie Girlie,’ the musical Revue with Harry Jolson playing the stellar role, which had…

  • The Fire Record, 1887

    The Fire Record, 1887

    Fire was recently in the news for taking a terrible toll on a city with the unthinkable destruction of the Notre Dame cathedral in Paris. But it was a loss of property and history only, not of life. Fire was once a much, much more pressing concern for cities. We’ve written briefly before on…

  • The Lorraine Block and a little more Stanford history

    The Lorraine Block and a little more Stanford history

    Once upon a time, the construction of a new office building really meant something – it was a point of pride for a community to know that a modern structure with all the modern amenities was being constructed to serve the premiere business of the city. The Lorraine Block was just such a building.…

  • The ‘Other’ Max Shinburn, Jail House Dog

    The ‘Other’ Max Shinburn, Jail House Dog

    Max Shinburn’s legend lived on in Albany, or at least in the Albany jail – in the form of a jailhouse dog, owned by Jake Fulder, which went by the name of “Max Shinburn.” On July 3, 1896, the Albany Morning Express hailed “The Name of Max Shinburn / Again Appears Upon the Records…

  • ‘Count’ Max Shinburn, King of the Bank Burglars

    ‘Count’ Max Shinburn, King of the Bank Burglars

    We’ve written before about some of the prisoners of the Albany County Penitentiary, a rather legendary lockup. But the old city jail, on Maiden Lane just behind City Hall, “hosted” one of the most notorious bank robbers of his age, Maximilian Shinburn. It’s a tale of safe-cracking, safe-blowing-up, and possibly of love with a…

  • An Albany Bride In the Soup

    An Albany Bride In the Soup

    We present this particular story in the spirit of Ripley’s “Believe It or Not,” at least in this sense: This appeared in the Albany Morning Express on July 22, 1895, and you may choose to believe it, or not. The headline was “An Albany Bride in the Soup. / The Expression Is Here Used…

  • The High Schools of Scotia

    The High Schools of Scotia

    A while back in a Facebook group, someone commented on this old postcard of the original Scotia High School, which opened in 1905 on First Street, just about across from where Center Street comes in. Anyone of a certain vintage knows this was later the junior high school, and, for an even certainer vintage,…

  • The Last of the Albany Piano Pieces!

    The Last of the Albany Piano Pieces!

    We wanted to finish up our survey of Albany piano makers. We covered John and Horace Meacham, Francis P. Burns, Marshall and Wendell, McCammon, and of course Boardman and Gray. There were others, and there were also some ancillary industries, like the specialists who only built the actions for the pianos. Afred Dolge, in…

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