Historical Articles

FOREST HILLS ARCHIVES – OUR MOST RECENT ACQUISITION Wednesday, September 18, 20240

FOREST HILLS ARCHIVES – OUR MOST RECENT ACQUISITION

     Over the years, our ER Department of Local History has received many donated materials.  This spring we received a major donation – a completely organized history of Forest Hills.  The collection of 13 binders and 2 large folio cases contained hundreds of photographs of homes and special seasonal events, advertising brochures, copies of property deeds, blueprints, maps, news articles, Association By-Laws, descriptions of preservation landscaping upgrades, and historical summaries.  The collection was the idea of former resident, Ken Dodgson.  Ken and his wife, Sally, fell in love with the area and the home at 13 Regency Drive (the only Art Deco home in Forest Hills) the moment they saw it.  After living in India for 24 years, the Dodgson’s resided at 13 Regency Drive for over 30 years.

     While the Forest Hills Development is actually in the Town of Perinton, it is in East Rochester’s school district, fire district, and postal zip code.  The area was created by East Rochester resident, Harold Dygert, whose home was located at 101 Park Drive.  Harold Dygert was born in May 1889, in a small town in northern New York.  He was a young child when his family moved to East Rochester.  Harold graduated from our high school, and studied architecture through a correspondence course with Columbia University.  Evidence of his work can be found throughout East Rochester and in Pittsford, Brighton, and Rochester.  His efforts in our community began when he encouraged Harry Eyer to build a movie theater, the Rialto, in 1919.  Later, called the Capri, it was converted into an apartment building by Mr. Dygert in 1966.  While Harold designed several homes throughout East Rochester, the Forest Hills Development was his favorite.  The 75 homes he designed there were built from 1932-1942.

     According to Ken Dodgson’s research, “the earliest known plans for the development of the area known as Forest Hills are penciled overlays superimposed on a site survey by John Abner Stuart done for Harold Dygert and completed on December 17, 1927.”  Probably because of the Depression, construction of actual homes did not begin for several years.  Plots began to be sold in 1932, with the earliest homes in the development being built on Lake Crescent Drive, with the home at 6 Lake Crescent Drive being the first.  Homes on Westwood, Ridgeview, Fair Oaks, and Regency Drives came afterwards.  Harold personally collaborated with each homeowner, thus making each home unique.  A variety of styles were used – Tudor Revival, English Cottage, French Eclectic, Colonial Revival, Cape Cod, French Regency, and one Art Deco.  The homes were built in the natural surroundings of woods, hills, and ponds.  Harold worked with his brother, Lawrence, who supervised construction and served as business manager.  During the New York World’s Fair (1939-1940) photographs of several of the homes were part of Kodak’s CAVALCADE OF COLOR which projected Kodachrome slides enlarged 50,000 times.

     I had the pleasure of meeting and thanking Ken Dodgson this month when he visited the Local History room.  He came with Tom Hamilton who had assisted with some of the archives and Colleen and Mike Robinson who helped deliver the archives to us.  The pleasure and pride Ken felt about his former home was clearly evident. 

WORLD WAR II ON THE HOMEFRONT Monday, September 16, 20240

WORLD WAR II ON THE HOMEFRONT

     As mentioned in my most recent article, THE CLASS OF ’44, the effects of World War II were deeply felt here at home.  By 1944, most of the women in East Rochester were employed.  Local industries were making products for the war.  For example, at the Piano Works, aircraft bodies and wings for the Canadian Air Force were being made, and steel landing mats, pontoons, and tank treads were being made at the Carshops, as well as coal tenders for the Russian railroad.

     Our village’s Child Care Committee saw a great need for a public child care center.  Committee members included:  Daniel Malone (Justice and longtime ER activist), Mayor George Schreib, E. D. Seward (Pittsford Town Supervisor), Theodore Morgan (outgoing School Superintendent), Lewis C. Obourn (Elementary School Principal/incoming School Superintendent), H. L. Brainerd (Trustee, ER Village Board), Rev. Earl Winters (Pastor, Parkside Methodist Church), and Mrs. William Greeley.  Rooms on the second floor of the Parkside Methodist Church’s addition were selected as the appropriate location.  Mrs. Mark B. Furman, a trustee of the Church, was chosen as Chairman of the Center.  The Church was the perfect spot since it was next to the school buildings on East Avenue and bordered Edmund Lyon Park.

     Funding for the Day Care Center was provided by the federal and state governments.  Parents contributed to the cost of feeding the children.  The Lanham Act of 1940 authorized funds for child care facilities for children whose mothers were working in defense and defense-related industries.  Funding was authorized through Title II of the National Defense Housing Act.  The purpose of the Law was to assist communities with water, sewer, housing, schools, and other local facilities’ needs related to the war and war industry.  In 1943, the U.S. Senate passed the first national child care program “to provide for public care of children whose mothers were employed for the duration of World War II.   The federal government offered grants for child care services to authorize community groups that could demonstrate a war-related need for the service.  The program was justified as a war expedient necessary to allow mothers to enter the labor force and increase war production.”  The centers helped families of all incomes, and so addressed the needs of both children and parents. The New York State War Council also realized the need for child care programs.  And in 1942, organized the Committee on Child Care, Development, and Protection.

     Articles in the spring and summer editions of the East Rochester Herald newspaper describe the planning and opening of East Rochester’s Child Care Center.   The village Center was the first in Monroe County, outside of the city of Rochester.  It opened on August 14, 1944.  Government funding paid for the cost of renovating the two large playrooms and providing equipment.  A sick bay and office area were also configured, with the church kitchen to be used for serving meals.  In selecting a director for the Center, Mrs.  Furman suggested Miriam Senzel, a young woman who lived in Rochester, and had graduated in 1942 from the University of Rochester with Mrs. Furman’s daughter, Justine.  Miriam, “Mimi,” had gone on to maste

The Way We Were - East Rochester, 1925 Thursday, May 2, 20240

The Way We Were - East Rochester, 1925

Several weeks ago, I decided to write my April article about what was happening in East Rochester during the last solar eclipse here in January 1925.  I searched through photographs, interviews, newspaper articles, files, and advertisements.  Sadly, I was able to find nothing about activity here in our village to celebrate the event.  So, I decided instead to write about what daily life was like in East Rochester ninety-nine years ago.
 

 

What's Cooking? ER's Cookbooks: A Lesson in History Friday, February 16, 20240

What's Cooking? ER's Cookbooks: A Lesson in History

In December, a new cookbook was added to the collection in the Local History Room -Centanni! – St. Nicholas Society Celebrates 100 Years of Italian-American Food, Family and Community. With over 250 photos and about 180 recipes, the book honors the Italian-American heritage in East Rochester. The book serves to remind us that each cookbook in our collection helps us understand the culture of our community, the commodities that were for sale as noted in the advertisements in some of the books, and the markets where foods were sold.

ERCN Community Access Television Friday, December 22, 20230

ERCN Community Access Television

Did you know the East Rochester Community Television channel went on "the air" for the first time on November 23, 1993?  Continue reading to learn how our local Channel came to life and how our Community Television channel continues to be available today!

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