• Schenectady’s Premier Aviator, Victor Rickard

    Schenectady’s Premier Aviator, Victor Rickard

    Sometimes we run across a name from local history and have to wonder how it’s possible that the person in question isn’t better known. And then we get vexed by trying to know them better, at the remove of a century or so. Such is the case of Victor Rickard. While Albany had an…

  • The Mohawk Overall Company

    The Mohawk Overall Company

    Saw this old postcard posted on the “Schenectady History – Photos and Discussions” Facebook group the other day, and it set us to wondering why we had never heard of the Mohawk Overall Company. It turns out it wasn’t around very long. The Mohawk Overall Company opened up in Schenectady in 1909, with a…

  • Albany’s Flying Bull

    Albany’s Flying Bull

    December 5, 1929. We offer no explanation.

  • Gov. Bouck’s Grand Quick Step

    Gov. Bouck’s Grand Quick Step

    More historic Albany sheet music, the product of historic Albanians. This one (again from the Lester Levy Sheet Music collection at Johns Hopkins) is “Gov. Bouck’s Grand Quick Step,” as performed by the National Brass Band, Albany. It was composed and arranged for the piano forte, “and respectfully dedicated to his excellency,” by Oliver…

  • The Wide Awake Quick Step

    The Wide Awake Quick Step

    Well, here’s another piece of all-Albany sheet music that we just had to share. It’s 1860’s The Wide Awake Quick Step! A brief history of early American and Civil War music reports that “The ‘Wide Awakes’ were an early Republican political group that supported the election of Abraham Lincoln for president in 1860. The…

  • My Cane Bottom Chair

    My Cane Bottom Chair

    Our endless search for all things Albany and Troy recently turned up this bit of sheet music from 1856 (courtesy of the Lester S. Levy Sheet Music Collection of the Johns Hopkins Sheridan Libraries and University Museums). Published in 1856 by the music publisher J.H. Hidley of 544 Broadway in Albany, “My Cane Bottom…

  • Modern Medicine Comes to Albany

    Modern Medicine Comes to Albany

    It seems almost impossible to imagine a world without antibiotics, but in fact penicillin is practically brand new, compared to some of the things we ramble on about here. On Oct. 6, 1943, its use was absolutely newsworthy, as the Times-Union reported on the recovery of a Chatham hairdresser: “Mrs. Florence Keniry, 28, Chatham…

  • Even more signs from around Albany

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