Showing posts with label Treman State Park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Treman State Park. Show all posts

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Tompkins County - Day 6


Friday, July 4, 2008

It is the 4th of July and all the government buildings are closed so the research has been completed for this trip. We spent the day going to Treman State Park and visiting other parts of the Ithaca area. The fireworks display were on the 2nd of July instead of the 4th and we learned today, as we expected, the fireworks had set off a number of fires on the Ithaca College campus. It was windy during the fireworks and we could see some of the burning fragments drifting towards parts of the campus. There had been lots of fire trucks and police traveling about with sirens blaring and lights flashing.
The gorges of Tompkins are up to their claims "Tompkins is Gorges". We had a 2 1/2 mile hike up the clifts of Treman State Park and through the wooded areas. There were several water falls and the park was full of campers. There were swimming pools at the base of some of the falls where people could swim. Our grandkids took advantage of the opportunity.
Tomorrow we pack up and drive back to Rhode Island.

Tompkins County - Day 1


Sunday, 29 June 2008

We traveled from Providence RI, where our son David lives with his wife and 2 children. We loaded up the car and, with various entertainment devices in hand to occupy a 5 and 9 year old, we headed west through the green rolling hills of Massachusetts and New york. It was a hot and muggy day but the the scenery was entertaining and the rolling hillsides and farmlands gave us an idea of centuries past. It is a 6 hour drive to Ithaca NY but the MapQuest directions served us well and we arrived to find our little rental house just right for the 6 of us. Ithaca is a typical college town with lots of fast food restaurants and a laid back atmosphere. It's the 4th of July week and many tourists are also in town to enjoy the area and its many attractions. It is nestled at the foot of Cayuga Lake in the Finger Lakes region and takes pride in its gorges, camping sites, hiking trails, water falls and lake activities.
The finger lakes extend north and south across Central New York like the fingers of a pair of outstretched hands. They were formed by glaciers that covered the state and formed the lake basins and river valleys of the region. There are two long ridges that run north and south and the roads follow these paths to Newfield and Danby where Reuben and Mary Strong settled along with their 10 children, including Jasper. There are 29 parks and recreation areas of the Finger Lakes State Parks, thus providing a wide variety of vacation opportunities.
We had identified Reuben's town through the census reports but it turns out to be slightly more complicated due to the restructuring of towns and counties during this very time. He is listed in the 1820 census in Cayuta and in the 1830 census as in Newfield. I assumed they had moved during this time since there is a Cayuta on the current map. As it turns out, Newfield was originally called Cayuta so they are one and the same. Newfield was taken from Spencer, Tioga Co., NY about 1811, called Cayuta and then the name was changed to Newfield when it became a part of Tompkins Co., abt. 1817. This also explains the John Abbot connection, (somehow related to Mary Abbot Strong) who is listed in the 1810 Spencer census and thereafter next to Reuben in the 1820 and 1830 census. Since Reuben is missing in the 1840 census, we have noted that Mary and kids seem to be in John's family, since he and his wife are alone in the others. The question was when did Reuben pass away?
Fortunately, I have had assistance from various family researchers who have added various pieces to the puzzle . Jeff Hayward is a descendant of Anna Strong, Reuben and Mary's first born child. He had shared a document of the sale of land from Mary Strong to Electa Hayward in 1853, his 4g Grandmother. He has also been working on the Abbott family and the Messenger family (Martha Messenger, Jasper's wife). More recently, I have exchanged e-mails with Cheryl Hall who was working on Freeman Strong who also lived in Tompkins county. Cheryl lives in Ithaca and works at Cornell University in town. She is also a genealogy resource for Danby in her spare time. She has provided us with a list of several potential resources to investigate in our quest for Reuben and family.