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FOREST HILLS ARCHIVES – OUR MOST RECENT ACQUISITION

FOREST HILLS ARCHIVES – OUR MOST RECENT ACQUISITION
Town/Village of East Rochester

FOREST HILLS ARCHIVES – OUR MOST RECENT ACQUISITION

Submitted May 2024, by Anita M. Mance, Historian

     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.  He presented our department with a photo of a painting of his home—13 Regency Drive.  Entitled, ‘A Home for All Seasons,’ it serves as a reminder of all that Forest Hills meant to him, and continues to mean to others who live there.  Ken’s work will always be a special part of our collection.

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Sam Urzetta

On August 26, 1950, Sam Urzetta won the U.S. Amateur Golf Championship at Minneapolis Golf Club, and at 24 years old became a hometown hero.  He had beaten Frank Stranahan (who was heavily favored) in a 1-up victory in 39 holes.

     I first met Mr. Urzetta when we were selected to be members of the ER Alumni Foundation Board of Directors.  Having lived in East Rochester my whole life, I had certainly heard of Sam, but had never met him.  I came to know him as a very kind, humble, caring man who was devoted to his family and community.

     Sam Urzetta was one of nine children.  He had four brothers and four sisters.  His parents, Carmine and Palma, were immigrants from Calabria, Italy.  Growing up in East Rochester, Sam began to caddie at Irondequoit Golf Club where his brother, Frank, was caddie master. Though really too young to be a caddie, he was allowed to do so by golf pro, Frank Commisso.  When Sam was in high school, there was no golf team.  He was very popular and played baseball and basketball, was manager of the football team, vice president of the Senior Class, and a member of the Brown and White (the high school newspaper).   Working with Frank Commisso, Sam became a top golf amateur.  When he was 21, he won the Rochester District Golf Association title.  The next year he was state amateur champion.  Sam served in the Army for 18 months.  He then went to St. Bonaventure where he starred in golf and basketball.  As captain of the basketball team, he led the nation in free throw shooting for two years, and still has the St. Bonaventure free throw record.  

     As an amateur golfer, Sam won the Monroe Invitational three times. In the summer of 1950, Sam took part in the US Amateur Championship in Minneapolis.  He was one of 210 golfers there.  After winning the tournament, a Gannett newspapers plane brought him home.  5,000 fans greeted him at the airport.  Neighbors on West Elm Street spray painted the road in front of the family’s home – “Welcome Home Sam Urzetta, US Amateur Champion.”  His victory at Minneapolis truly made him a hero to our village.  He played on the Walker Cup team twice (1951, 1953), and in the America’s Cup once (1952).  His team won all three of these events. In 1952, Sam married his school classmate, Mary Ellen Trescott.  They would have four children:   Helen, Michael, Peter, and Joseph.

     Sam turned pro in 1954.  Over the years he took part in a number of tournaments and received many awards.  He played in four US Opens, four Masters, four PGA Championships.  He is on the Frontier Field (now Innovative Field) Walk of Fame, Monroe County Hall of Fame, Rochester District Association Hall of Fame, Western New York PGA Hall of Fame, St. Bonaventure Hall of Fame, and the ER Hall of Fame.  He served as head golf pro at the Country Club of Rochester for 37 years, and was pro emeritus until he died.  While he could have made a career as a professional golfer in tournaments, Sam chose to stay home with his family.

     This summer Sam’s daughter, Helen, went to Minneapolis to visit the place where her father had b

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