Monday, April 6, 2009

Paul Sidney, Dead at 69

I was on the WABC music Radio web site last week and read the news Paul Sidney, general manager of radio station WLNG died Wednesday night. As late as Monday, Paul was trying to order a pizza from Conca D'ro, while in the hospital. Paul was with WLNG since 1964. As a matter of fact, the owner of the station at the time lived behind me on Howard St.
I first visited the station in November 1963 on a cub scout field trip, about two weeks before Kennedy was assassinated. A small three room building, with the noisy, air cooled 500 watt AM transmitter right next to the DJ's Boothe. Chris Johnson was the DJ that November afternoon. It was a daytime AM station that signed off at sundown.
Paul was known for his afternoon show, Paul's partyline. I remember about 1965 walking downstreet after school one day and seeming him do a remote in the front window of Spitz's Furniture and Appliance store dressed in pajamas. He was advertising one of their beds.
Paul was known for his storm coverage and remotes. His life revolved around radio. He will be missed. His favorite bench next to the five and ten will get a plaque in his memory. Knowing his health was failing, I recorded about a 90 minute air check of his 2008 Christmas show that he has done every Christmas morning since 1965. Sag Harbor has lost another of it's real characters.
PhotobucketThe late great Paul Sidney

Friday, March 20, 2009

A Factory Story, Part 1

Apparently TV Land has stopped broadcasting Leave it to Beaver, so my son asked me to pick him up a DVD of the series, the other night. Not having much else to do, I sat through an episode where Beaver sneaks into the office of Mrs. Rayburn, the principal of Beaver's school. He's looking for a spanking machine in Mrs. Rayburn's closet, and is accidentally locked inside that night by the janitor. Mrs. Rayburn reminded me of a woman I worked for one time many years ago; Miss Elizabeth Hall. Miss Hall was the production manager of the Bulova Watch Case factory, where I worked one winter, right out of school, while deciding on a career goal. A charming, well educated woman, but certainly not one you would want to mess with. She could hold her own to any man, and the men respected her for it. In fact, she was Sag Harbor's first appointed female mayor, filling in for the last month of Hap Barry's term, who died in office February 1957. Miss Hall was a trustee at the time. For some reason, she chose not to run for reelection as mayor. Although it was never brought up in conversation, I suspect she found it difficult in the so called old boys network, as local politics were at the time.
So it was one October day, I found myself in Bulova's employment office looking for a job. The four story brick build sits on the corner of Hampton and Washington streets. Actually only the second story was used for producing watchcases. After entering the Washington Street entrance and walking up a flight of stairs, I found the employment office. There were about 260 employees working there in the early 70's. Women workers outnumbered men about 60/40. The pay was only $2.50 an hour. The hours were good, 8-5, Monday to Friday with an hour off for lunch. The factory closed the week between Christmas and New Years, and another 3 weeks in July. Of course there were no benefits what-so-ever. After a brief interview I was told I could start that afternoon at 1pm. To be continued:
PhotobucketBulova about 1988 after it was closed
PhotobucketWashington Street Entrance
PhotobucketLobby inside entrance to second floor
PhotobucketStairway leading up to second floor
PhotobucketBrooken glass door to employment office on 2nd floorPhotobucket2005 photo of Bulova's employment office,2nd floor

Fixing up a Dump, Part 3

Well, work has been progressing somewhat on the house on Noyac Road. With a target date for completion being the spring of 2010, we have a year to go. The interior has been gutted to the studs. Outside we jacked up the old porch to where it should be. The locust posts were replaced by brick. The floor was ripped out and replaced with five quarter southern yellow pine. We saved the old porch posts and woodwork. The cracks in the post were filled with automotive bondo, the only thing that really works. The porch roof was replaced, as were the railings, that could not be saved. The sides of the house were reshingled also. Still to be done outside, is to install a bead board ceiling on the porch, and replace the exterior doors and windows. Wooden windows that match the old ones can be had for about 700 dollars each, and are much more efficient. You can't tell the new window from a old window from the street, I do however save the old glass itself, which is about 100 years old. The windows themselves are usually rotted out. We have cleared out the back property, and will be erecting a 40 by 60 foot barn shortly. This job is part restoration and part renovation. We'll post another look later this summer.PhotobucketThe Old porch
PhotobucketAnd the new restoration

Thursday, March 19, 2009

The patient almost succumbed

Man, was I pissed. A couple of weeks ago, I got hit with a particularly nasty virus. The computer that is, not me. I run XP because I like it. Vista does nothing for me as a operating system, and is a memory hogger. I also disable virus protection programs as they slow down performance. I do however use a free shareware program called Ad-Aware once a week to clean out the ad stuff that gets planted on the hard drive and use a pop-up eliminator on my web browser.
Well I got hit with a virus called Spy Protect 2009 that some retard/s placed on the internet. Contrary to popular believe, you don't always get a virus in the e-mail, but more likely off certain websites. No, I'm not going to tell you what sites I hang out at! Anyway, this virus throws pop-ups on your screen every few seconds stating your computer is infected with a virus, and to go to a certain website where for $29.95 you can buy the Spy Protect program to download and rid your computer of the problem. Basically, these retards have planted the virus on your machine and are trying to extort $29.95 from you to remove it. It makes your computer virtually useless you pay up.
If a local person pulled something like this on me, I would string them up by the nuts, and hang them off the North Haven bridge. But being on the internet, the perpetrators could be anywhere, even Russia, so I can't get revenge.
Anyway, I did a google search and found a lot people have forums and advice about this virus, along with at least six companies promising to get rid of this virus if you buy their software for 30 to 50 bucks. After reading the forums, I found most of the software programs don't even work on this virus and the companies are conartists
I could of just reformatted the drive and restored it to factory default. But I really wanted to save a lot of the data I acquired over the past year. So not having any dire emergency to fix it, and I have a little 8 inch netbook on my wi-fi netbook to check my e-mail, etc, I poked around for a while and finally found directions to remove the hidden files. Part of it involved removing several lines of code from the registry. Not really wanting to do this, I poked around the forums longer until I found directions to a free shareware site, where I could download their anti-virus program. I downloaded it, opened and ran it. Rebooted and now back in business. No signs of this virus along with over 600 other suspicious files this software has removed. The patient appears to have made a complete recovery.
PhotobucketSpyware Protect 2009 Sucks!

Sunday, February 22, 2009

The Old Bridge, Continued

Man, I received an e-mail from a local organization today, mainly about Sag Harbor's history. Yesterday I wrote about developers planning a condominium project at the foot of North Haven bridge on the old Diner property. Soooo I joined this local organization's mailing list and poked around their website. Now, I will tell you what I don't like. There is a height issue. Whether it is one building or four, they appear to tower above their neighbors. Second, there is mention of underwater property rights and dredging. Read - MARINA. The Remkus's never had a marina. They had two small wooden docks to dock their fishing boats, and had less than a dozen 16 foot wooden skiffs moored along the shore, which they rented out by the day. Unfortunately, I can see it now; A modern marina like the others in the village. No doubt interfering on the public right of way along the shore front by the bridge.
I had some free time today, being a Sunday, so I did some armchair detective work about this abandoned bridge road, and this is what I found out.
In 1900, the county of Suffolk, at a cost of $13,000 erected a 375 foot steel swing drawbridge from Sag Harbor to North Haven. The access to this bridge was granted in an easement by the LIRR.This bridge lasted until December 28, 1936 when a reinforced concrete bridge opened about 500 feet to the north. This bridge, built at a cost of $200,000 had a 390 foot span with 300 foot causeway approaches. The 1938 bridge lasted until about 2000, when it was reconstructed and widened and serves to this present day.
After some research today, I found the old Rt 114 bridge access road actually became Old Bridge Road. It is listed as such in the 1955 local telephone directory, when I looked under the name Remkus today. The railroad closed in Sag Harbor in 1939 and Jim McMahon, a former mayor who owned a coal yard by the railroad station bought a lot of the property from the LIRR. He in turn, sold some to the Remkus family, no doubt in the late 1940's or so, who opened the fishing station and Seaside Restaurant.
So what does this all mean? It means this little road could be in the spotlight, in what happens in the future at Ferry Road condos. Stay tuned.Photobucket1935 aerial of the old bridge, and what is known as Old Bridge Road. Railroad yards and gas ball in foreground.
You can see part of the old steel bridge on the left.

Photobucket1999 photo of same area where the newer bridge sits about 500 feet to the north. Notice how the area has been built up in 60 years.

Saturday, February 21, 2009

The Shore Road Mystery

Man, I was reading a copy of the Sag Harbor Express yesterday, and the Ferry Road Condo's project was again on the front page. Dr. Harry Diner of Noyac owned this property for years, after buying it from the Remkus family in the 1980's. The Remkus's owned the Seaside Restaurant and the Fishing Station at the base of the North Haven bridge. Dr. Diner ran the old restaurant as the Harbor Professional Building for years, until he passed away a few years back. The Diner family sold it to East End Ventures who are hoping to build another big condo complex on the property.
That is a brief history of the project, however a new development has arisen. it concerns a abandoned cement road that runs from the base of the present day bridge to the fishing station. Back it the summer of 1964, my cousin and I would walk along this abandoned road, which led to where the the old wooden bridge to North Haven once stood, a few hundred feet west of the present day bridge. We would get a soda at the machine at the fishing station and walk along the abandoned road back to the foot of the bridge by the flagpole. The road is still there. Look in front of the old Harbor Professional Building next time you come over the bridge and you will see it.
Now there is a dispute on who actually owns this abandoned road. The Long Island Railroad who owned the property in the late 1800's granted an easement to the Village of Sag Harbor, to build this road to the North Haven Bridge. The Save Sag Harbor group had a title search done and it appears the Village of Sag Harbor owns the road and all waterfront property west of the bridge. East End Ventures claims they own at least half the road, and must do so in order to fulfill the necessary setback requirements to build the project as planned.
So where does this stand? I side with the Save Sag Harbor group. They did their homework, studied the history of the site and invested money for title searches. I for one would like to see the Village buy this property and make it into a park. However, I doubt they have that kind of money. They do however as of this date, appear to own the cement road, which is called Shore Road on old postcards, and the associated waterfront property. Who owns Shore Road may be in dispute, but appears to be no longer a mystery. It will not be easy for East End Ventures to claim this road, and will no doubt end in court for several years. And you know something? Tough shit guys!
PhotobucketThis is the Sag Harbor side of the old North Haven
bridge where it once terminated by this abandoned
fishing station.(1989 photo)

Friday, February 6, 2009

The Masonic Temple

Man, in the 60's, I grew up in a little saltbox 2 bedroom cottage on a 40 by 100 foot piece of property behind the Masonic Temple, A/K/A, Suffolk County Whaling Museum in Sag Harbor. The Masons met on Monday nights, once a month on the second floor of the Masonic Temple. As a matter of fact, as far as I know, they still do. The women's Eastern Star group, met on Thursday nights, once a month. I think this organization ceases to exist in Sag Harbor anymore. The museum, which operated from mid-May to Mid-September was located on the first floor. This building was once the home of Mrs. Russell Sage and built in the 1800's. There was one burglary there in the fall of 1963, where the robbers parked in front of my house one night about 7pm and broke into the museum and stole several rifles. The police later caught the two men. In the 50's and 60's the property was very well kept up. By the 1980's the large rear yard was no longer being mowed and grew knee high. I also noticed the front yard was becoming increasing cluttered with school bells, time capsules, sculptures and other uninteresting things. As decades passed, the building itself fell into disrepair and still is. The building was taken over by new management in the late 1990's and improved. I was inside last summer and although it is ok, I think it could use a complete modernization. The outside has become very rundown. It urgently needs several hundred thousand dollars in funds for repairs. Sad to see this happen. A building like this needs huge sums of money to be maintained. I hope things will work out!
PhotobucketThe museum and grounds in it's glory days, 1960.
 
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