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Posts Tagged ‘New York’

Sorry for the last of posts this week (and probably next week).   I’m in the process of moving; once I get settled, I’ll get back into my Tuesdays-Saturdays posting routine.

Let’s have an interactive entry.  The Skyway was named such because the City of Buffalo had a contest to name it.  There was a cash prize, as well as the bragging rights to say that  you named the road that one day Infrastructurist would call one of the top seven highways to tear down.

So, if you had the power to rename any street (including the skyway) in Buffalo, what would it be and why?  Would you name a street after yourself?  After Justin Beiber?  Let me know in the comments…I want to hear your ideas!

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Putnam Street runs about 0.3 miles on the West Side of Buffalo, west of Richmond Avenue, between Lafayette Avenue and West Ferry Street.    The street was named for James O Putnam.

James Osborne Putnam was  a friend of Lincoln before he became president and worked on Lincoln’s election campaigns.  He was also appointed by President Garfield to represent the US as minister to Belguim.

Putnam’s relatives arrived in Salem, Massachusetts in the early 1600s.  James was related to the Revolutionary War general, Israel Putnam.  The Putnam family arrived in Western New York in 1817 and built a log cabin.  James O. Putnam was born a year later.  James studied law at Yale and came back to Buffalo to practice.  While waiting on clients, he spent his time writing a book of essays and biographical sketches of Buffalonians.  His book can be found  here.

The Putnams lived on Swan Street, but later moved into a brick house at 756 Washington Street (The Putnam House was used as a kindergarten and nursery school for years after his death).  James O Putnam owned a farm that covered most of the land west of Richmond Avenue including Putnam Street.  He bought the land as an investment, and subdivided it into building lots and sold them.   The trees on the east side of Richmond Ave from Colonial Circle to Breckinridge were planted by James O Putnam.  He was a perfectionist, and inspected the trees year after year.  The weakling trees would be uprooted and replaced throughout the years.   At the age of 80, Mr. Putnam was selected to present the flags to the Buffalo soldiers and sailors leaving for the Spanish American War.    He also served as Chancellor of the University of Buffalo.  He is buried in Forest Lawn Cemetery.

Source:  “Named for James O Putnam”.  Courier Express Aug 28, 1938, Located in ECBPL Buffalo Streets Scrapbook, Vol 2.

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Hodge Avenue runs approximately a half-mile between Delaware Avenue and Ashland Avenue.  Like many of the streets in the Elmwood Village, Hodge Street is lined with beautiful homes and large stately trees.  It’s hard to imagine the City of Buffalo without it’s street trees.  Although, the trees might not even be there if it wasn’t for the Hodge family….

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Numbered Streets in Buffalo

One thing many people don’t understand is Buffalo’s numbered streets.  Sure, we don’t have a perfect numbered grid like New York City, but our radial street pattern and unique street names are important to the City of Buffalo’s identity.  (Also, it gives me a reason to blog).

While Buffalo does have some numbered streets, the numbered streets  seem not to make any sense at all.  They are scattered throughout the west side of Buffalo in a seemingly random fashion.  We have the following numbered streets:

  • 4th
  • 7th
  • 10th
  • 14th
  • 15th
  • 16th
  • 17th
  • 18th
  • 19th

Why do they start with number 4?  Why do they skip numbers?  Why don’t they make any sense?

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Did you go to the concert tonight on Bidwell Parkway?  Do you shop at the Elmwood-Bidwell Farmer’s market on Saturday mornings?   Bidwell Parkway is one of the Olmsted Parkways, designed as an entranceway into Delaware Park.  The Parkway serves as a meeting ground for the community in the vibrant Elmwood Village.

But do you know who Bidwell was?

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Letchworth is a small street, running about one-tenth of a mile between Grant and Dart Streets, behind Buffalo State College.  Most people know of Letchworth as a park in Genesee County, but did you who it’s name after?

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Bird Avenue runs approximately 1.5 miles between Delaware Avenue and Niagara Street, just south of Forest Avenue.

Buffalo has Eagle Street and Swan Street.  It’s natural to assume that Bird Street was named after the birds that make their home along the Niagara River.  Well, it’s not named after our fine feathered friends, but there were some Birds who made their home along the river…

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Gates Circle is a part of the Olmsted Parks and Parkways System that Buffalo is known for (so is Symphony Circle, which we’ve already talked about).  It’s one of two traffic circles on Delaware Avenue.  The Circle has beautiful light fictures, two water-spout fountains, and a granite bench which circles the larger center fountain.   It’s a neat design, because the fountain is sunken down, so from the inside of the circle, you can’t really see cars on the street, so you feel like you’re actually in a park, not surrounded by Delaware Avenue, which can get busy, traffic-wise.

It’s been hot in Buffalo this week.  Maybe you’ve driven, biked or walked down Delaware Avenue and thought, “I really want to hop in the fountain at Gates Circle.  But then, out of the corner of your eye, you notice the sign….NO WADING OR SWIMMING IN THE FOUNTAIN.

Darn.

But swimming and wading wasn’t always forbidden….

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“There is nothing like looking, if you want to find something….You certainly usually find something, if you look, but it is not always quite the something you were after.”   – JRR Tolkien, The Hobbitt

I decided to fill you all in on how I’ve been doing my research.  As most of you know, the internet is a vast, amazing source of knowledge. However, anyone can put forth a website and call it fact. I’ve decided to do the majority of my research through conventional means.  In short, I’m a bookworm.  And libraries are important.

In Buffalo, we’re lucky to have two wonderful resources involving Buffalo historical research, the Research Library at the Buffalo and Erie County Historical Society (BECHS) and the Grovesnor Room at the Central Library.  If you’ve never been to either of these locations, I highly recommend stopping by.  You can get lost in the old books, discovering new things and diving into stacks and stacks of Buffalo history.   Amazing resources are available, right under our fingertips.

The Research Library at BECHS is located at what most people refer to as the History Museum.   The library documents the history of Buffalo and the region, and has several special collections.  If you haven’t been to the History Museum since your 4th grade field trip or to pose for wedding pics, you should definitely stop by, revisit the exhibits (the new Pioneer Room just opened this summer) and poke your head in the library.   Cynthia, the librarian at  BECHS, has  been extremely helpful in letting me know about the existence of articles about the history of Buffalo Streets, being supportive of my intent to start the blog, and reminding me to cite my sources!

The Grovesnor Room used to be its own library, which operated as a non-circulating reference library since 1871.   It provided library services until 1963 when it merged with the Buffalo Public Library when the Buffalo and Erie County Public Library was founded.  The room, located at the Central library contains a large collection of books about Buffalo, as well as a local history file, scrapbooks, microfilm of numerous newspapers, and maps.

My favorite things in the Grovesnor Room are the feasibility study that was done to decide where to locate the Bills stadium when they were moving from the Rockpile (Orchard Park wasn’t even on the list!).  And they have the original blueprints for Memorial Auditorium (RIP my beloved Aud).  The librarians in the Grovesnor Room are also wonderful, providing resources and encouragement while I sit and do research.  I’ve been spending a lot of time with the Local History File, and the Buffalo History Scrapbooks, full of newspaper clippings, some more than 100 years old!!

If anyone has any questions about my sources for any of the information, feel free to contact me and let me know.  And if you ever want to spend an afternoon getting lost in Buffalo history, let me know and I’ll meet you at the library!

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Typically, it seems as if streets are named in memorial after people have died.  Unless, of course, you’re one of the richest men in the city, or you use a street as your cow’s shortcut.   Sometimes, people are honored even before their deaths.  Copeland Place is a short, less than a tenth of a mile, road near the intersection of Ontario and Tonawanda Streets in the Riverside Neighborhood of Buffalo.  What an honor and surprise it must have been for Copeland Place’s namesake to be called into a real estate developer’s office and see his name place on a map!   (more…)

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