This is not a story that I like to report but it is one that needs attention. Recently cemetery workers at the historic Oakwood Cemetery in Troy noticed that numerous headstones were knocked over. 108 stones in fact were vandalized. The Times Union reports that this act may be some sort of revenge act because this section of the cemetery had approximately 1000 stones uprighted and reset last year. I am attaching links to various news sites for the report.
From the Times Union
From CBS 6 News
From FOX23 News
A blog that discusses Albany, New York area history. Areas of focus include historical and genealogical research, documentation, ethnicity, cemeteries, gravestone restoration, and historic landmarks.
26 January 2014
24 January 2014
Upcoming Spring Genealogical meeting
The New York chapter of the Palatines to America National German Genealogy Society will be holding their annual Spring meeting on Saturday, 3
May 2014 in Troy, NY. Details for the
event:
The New York Chapter meeting is at the Gilead Lutheran
Church in Troy, NY. The meeting will include a short history of this Palatine
church as well as a presentation on the Palatine loyalists during the
Revolutionary War by Garry Finkell. A second presentation entitled “Researching
Your German Ancestors will be provided by Joe Lieby.
19 January 2014
Wurstfest
Here is the first plug for ethnic events in the Capital District in 2014. The details are pasted from the German-American Club of Albany's website.
On Saturday January 25, 2014, escape Cabin Fever and celebrate with us on the "Wurst Night of the Year" where we will be serving a hearty German Wurst Dinner Platter and where German Bier is always on tap. Live music will be provided by Paul Slusser. Doors open at 4 PM. Dinner served at 5 PM. Our Wurst platter will include 2 Wurst, German Potato Salad, Sauerkraut, Salad and Dessert at $20 per person. Walk-ins are welcome for music and dancing at $6 per person. For reserverations, please call 518.439.5932. All of our events are open to the public!
On Saturday January 25, 2014, escape Cabin Fever and celebrate with us on the "Wurst Night of the Year" where we will be serving a hearty German Wurst Dinner Platter and where German Bier is always on tap. Live music will be provided by Paul Slusser. Doors open at 4 PM. Dinner served at 5 PM. Our Wurst platter will include 2 Wurst, German Potato Salad, Sauerkraut, Salad and Dessert at $20 per person. Walk-ins are welcome for music and dancing at $6 per person. For reserverations, please call 518.439.5932. All of our events are open to the public!
11 November 2013
First impressions with online courses
Just a brief note on my first impression about the online course that I am taking from the National Institute for Genealogical Studies. I am taking a course called Using the Internet. Although the course only began last week, I am very pleased with it. The course lasts for six weeks but you can move ahead quicker if you desire. So far I am slightly ahead of the schedule. You can truly work at your own pace. The "reading" load is not heavy and is interesting. Assignments are only required if the student is working on a certificate in one of their programs. Also I am finding out about many different "gateway" websites that were previously unknown to me. These sites will definitely further my online research. I will post a complete review after I complete the course.
08 November 2013
Brief history of German Brewers in Albany
Although I am interested in and research all of my ethnic lines, I have accumulated a huge amount of
German-American history in Albany from my Masters Thesis research . The following is an excerpt from my 2005 MA Thesis, From Acceptance to Renunication: Das Ende von Albanys Deuschtum. The sub-chapter gives a brief history of Albany's German brewers and the a brief synopsis of the times.
Bavarian born Jacob Kirchner (1811-1882) operated out of 9 Central Avenue and 8-10
Sherman Street. Today the sites are vacant
lots. Christian Rapp worked out of 65-67
Central Avenue. Presently, the edifice
houses apartments above small business on the ground level.
William Schindler labored from 393-403 South
Pearl Street. Today the site is home for
dilapidated buildings and vacant lots.
At present a vacant lot, 44-46 Third Avenue housed the former brewery of George Weber (1825-1906), brewer of weiss beer. His business was established in 1858.
German-American history in Albany from my Masters Thesis research . The following is an excerpt from my 2005 MA Thesis, From Acceptance to Renunication: Das Ende von Albanys Deuschtum. The sub-chapter gives a brief history of Albany's German brewers and the a brief synopsis of the times.
Bier, Joviality, and Celebrations = Gemütlichkeit:[1]
Ethnic membership
in any national group holds with it specific cultural characteristics, and
German immigrants brought with them to America traits such as a love for beer,
singing, festive celebrations, and camaraderie.
These German attributes were opposed by the temperament of mainstream
Anglo-America. The first local
organization to disapprove and to attempt to suppress alcohol consumption was
the New York State Temperance Society, which was formed on April 2, 1829. The group also ventured to limit the sale of
intoxicating beverages. The society was
supported by numerous philanthropic citizens, and its influence spread
throughout the state. By March 1832 the
society was publishing its principal organ, The
Temperance Recorder, in Albany.[2] Also in 1832 there were fourteen temperance
societies in Albany with a membership of 4,164.[3] Many temperance members were native born
Americans who desired the arriving Europeans to completely accept the attitudes
of Anglo-America for thorough assimilation into American society. Their belief held that immigrants must
discard their cultural heritage and submit to Anglo-conformity. Historian Andrew P. Yox vividly describes and
contrasts the German neighborhood to the “English” district;
Unlike the sedate neighborhoods of
the Anglo-Americans, the German district rustled with sounds. Beer gardens, brass bands, shops, dance
halls, and “slumber-breaking” bells, installed in the steeples to rouse the
artisans for work, teamed up to deprive the Yankees of their once quiet weekends. The German community was much younger and
more tolerant with regard to beer and dancing and more populated than the
Anglo-American sectors.[4]
The temperance
movement was viewed by Germans as an issue of Anglo-American Puritanism. German-Americans opposed laws against alcohol
consumption and Sabbath-breaking activities.
From their perspective, such laws reflected the Puritan Sunday. German-Americans preferred a “Continental
Sunday,” where they would spend an afternoon with the entire family at picnics
and festivities.[5] Geselligkeit, or sociability, was strong
in family settings and in the community feasts attended by
German-Americans. Union College English
Professor Codman Hislop describes the Puritan Sunday in Albany during the early
nineteenth century;
By order of the Common Council all
amusements ceased…The only noise to be heard throughout the city was the
occasional rattle of a stagecoach as it toured the city from tavern to tavern
to pick up its passengers. Albanians
were expected to be in one of the nineteen churches which held services on that
day.[6]
Music, alcohol,
and food formed the foundations of German holiday celebrations such as
Christmas, Easter, weddings, and baptisms.
Consumption of beer was common practice in German culture. The 1884 Albany
Handbook reminds readers that “Twenty years ago lager beer was almost
unheard of outside of Germany. Today it
may be called the national drink of America.…” Also, “For many years Albany had
been noted for its ale, but it was not until 1878 that it became equally famous
for lager.”[7] In 1973
the Knickerbocker News reported that
“…by the end of fiscal year, May 1, 1884, 359,203 barrels of malt liquors were
produced in the city, an increase of 26,409 barrels above the previous year.”[8] It
is estimated that the total number of barrels can be broken down to
approximately 263,500 barrels of ale and almost 95,000 barrels of lager style
beer.[9]
A keg of beer aided any festivity
and usually prompted a successful venture.
Germans regarded beer as “healthy and nourishing,” and unlike the
English language press, German newspapers always printed advertisements for
beer and wine, as well as for German Biergartens.[10] A letter to an American in Baltimore was
printed in the Albany Evening Times that describes the scene at beer
gardens in Vienna;
Beer
gardens and beer rooms are everywhere in Vienna and the drinking of beer seems
to be regarded as one of the necessaries of life. It is drank [sic] freely at all the
restaurants and is brought as a matter of course to every one as soon as they
take a seat at a table. A man who would
undertake to eat without beer would be regarded as a curiosity…Beer is the
daily and hourly drink of almost everyone, old and young. It is part of their daily food, just as
coffee and tea is with us. When families
are dining at the restaurants, the beer mug stands by the plate of old and
young, male and female, and it is even put to the lips of infants. Vienna beer does not; however, seem to have
any intoxicating effect and it never occasions a headache. We have seen and been in the company of men
who will drink a dozen large glasses in an evening without observing the
slightest inebriating effect. We doubt
if they could drink as much American beer with impunity.[11]
The German love for beer is quite evident in
the number of German breweries, both large and small that were located in
Albany. John F. Hedrick founded the
first large German Lager Bier brewery, the Hedrick Brewing Company in
1852.
![]() |
| 1907 Ad |
The Hedrick Brewery produced only one thousand barrels of beer in 1856,
but its output increased; by 1878 the brewery was producing three thousand
barrels per year, and by 1901 the volume had reached eight thousand barrels per
year. The brewery was located at 426-430
Central Avenue.
It ceased producing beer in 1919
and closed down completely in 1925.
However, the brewery survived prohibition and reopened in 1933. There is conjecture that the reason why the
brewery survived was due to the fact that it was owned by Daniel Peter
O’Connell (1886-1977), the chairman of the Albany County Democratic
Committee. It has been suggested that it
was literally impossible for a tavern owner to obtain a license if the
proprietor did not sell Hedrick Beer.[12] The original brewery buildings have been long
torn down; presently the site is home to the Central Towers, owned by the
Albany Housing Authority.
In
1852 Prussian-born Frederick Hinckel (1832-1881) and Windsheim, Bavarian-born
Johann Andreas Schinnerer (1827-1876) established the Cataract Brewery. Its premises occupied half a city block,
bounded by Swan Street, Myrtle and Park Avenues. By 1864 Hinckel was the sole owner of the
business- Schinnerer opened another brewery in Schenectady.
![]() |
| 1873 Ad |
![]() |
| 1903 Ad |
In the early 1880s, the brewery’s name was changed to the Hinckel
Brewery. In the 1850s, the brewery
produced somewhat small quantities of beer, approximately five hundred barrels
of beer a year. Yet as years passed the
brewery substantially increased its output.
In 1886 alone the Hinckel Brewery produced at least thirty-five thousand
barrels of beer and employed seventy-five employees. After the death of Frederick Hinckel Jr. in
1916, family involvement with the brewery ceased. In 1922 the Hinckel Brewery closed.[13] In the mid 1980s, the vacant brewery
buildings were transformed into a luxurious apartment complex.
Around the corner from Hinckel brewers was Dobler Brewing Company,
bordering Swan and Elm Streets and Myrtle Avenue. John Dobler founded the business in
1865. By 1897 the capacity at the
brewery was sixty thousand barrels per year, with sixty employees. The Doblers succumbed to competition from
premium breweries throughout the country and sold the Dobler name to the
Hampton-Harvard Company of Massachusetts in 1968.[14] The brewery buildings have long vanished from
the streetscape.
![]() |
| 1876 Ad |
Smaller scale breweries owned
and operated by German proprietors included Frederick Dietz’s, located on the
southwest corner of South Pearl Street and McCarty Avenue. Today the former site is covered by a bridge
with Interstate 787 traveling over it.
![]() |
| 1876 Ad |
At present a vacant lot, 44-46 Third Avenue housed the former brewery of George Weber (1825-1906), brewer of weiss beer. His business was established in 1858.
![]() |
| 1889 Ad |
![]() |
| 1897 Ad |
[1] Gemütlichkeit is defined as a convivial
atmosphere of genial sociability.
[2] John
Homer French, comp., Gazetteer of the
State of New York (Syracuse: R. Pearsall Smith, 1860), p. 147.
[3] Howell
and Tenney, eds., History of the County
of Albany, N. Y, p. 340.
[4] Yox,
“Bonds of Community: Buffalo’s German Element,” New York History 66(2):
141. O’Connor, German-Americans,
pp. 288-292. Regarding Anglo intolerance, see, Reimer, “Ethnicity in
Albany, N. Y., 1888-1908,” p. 10. Reimer notes that “by 1811, the Dutch had
become so powerless that the new Yankee majority on the Common Council could
forbid their main cultural event, the Pinksterfest, as being too boisterous and
disorderly to their New England taste.” Similarily, Cuyler Reynolds wrote “No
person shall erect any tent, booth or stall within the limits of this city, for
the purpose of vending any spirituous liquors, beer, mead or cider, or any kind
of meat, fish, cakes or fruit, on the days commonly called Pinxter; nor to
collect in numbers for the purpose of gambling or dancing, or any other
amusements, in any part of the city, or to march or parade, with or without any
kind of music, under a penalty of ten dollars or confinement in jail.”Reynolds,
Albany Chronicles, p. 409.
[5]
Tolzmann, The German-American Experience, p. 234. Luebke, “The German-American Alliance in Nebraska , 1910-1917,”Nebraska History 49(2): 173-174. Frank C.
Nelson, “The German-American Immigrant Struggle,” International Review of History and Political Science 10(1): 39.
[6] Codman
Hislop, Albany: Dutch, English, and
American (Albany, The Argus Press, 1936), pp. 263-264.
[7] Henry
Pitt Phelps, comp., The Albany Hand-Book:
A Strangers’ Guide and Residents’ Manual (Albany: Brandow & Barton,
Printers and Publishers, 1884), pp. 99-100.
[8] Knickerbocker News, June 7, 1973, 6C:1.
[9] Times Union, July 6, 1986, Supplement,
57:2.
[10] Jay P.
Dolan, The Immigrant
Church : New York ’s Irish and German Catholics,
1815-1865 (Baltimore: The John Hopkins University Press, 1975), p. 128. For
an advertisement of Ferdinand Lange’s hall and garden located at 72-81 Central
Avenue and 293 Washington Avenue, see
Albany Freie Blaetter, November 7, 1877.
See, the Albany Evening Journal,
July 20, 1888; for a summary of the entertainment at Lange’s, which was
provided by visiting German-American singing societies. Morris Gerber reprints
a Van Olinda article from the Times Union
describing Lange’s in Old Albany,
Volume 3, p. 214. Lange always provided music and dancing. The pavilion was
always filled to capacity. He was also
famous for his sauerbraten, potato pancakes, kalbschmierbraten, and
wienerschnitzel.
[11] Albany Evening Times, July 12, 1878,
1:4.
[12] Stanley
M. Axelrod, “A History of the Brewing Industry in the City of Albany, 1683-1965.”
(Seminar paper, State University of New York at Albany, 1969), pp. 25-26. Paper
in possession of the Albany Hall of Records.
[13] Howell
and Tenney, eds., History of the County
of Albany, N. Y., pp. 559-560. Axelrod, “A History of the Brewing Industry
in the City of Albany,” p. 24. Knickerbocker
News, June 7, 1973, 6C:1; July 28, 1980.
[14]
Axelrod, A History of the Brewing
Industry in the City of Albany, 1683-1965, pp. 29-30. n. a., Geschichte der Deutschen in Albany und Troy
(Albany: Albany Taeglicher Herold, 1897), p. 176.
[15] n. a., Geschichte der Deutschen in Albany und Troy
(Albany: Albany Taeglicher Herold, 1897), p. 228.
29 October 2013
Online Genealogy Courses
There are many ways to learn "how to do" genealogical research; such as taking seminars, heading to a local LDS Family History Center, asking other genealogists, joining a genealogical society, reading a book on the subject, or simply talking to librarian. Whatever you do, you need to start with yourself and your siblings and then start to work backwards with your parents, aunts, and uncles; then your grandparents, etc.
Doing genealogical research is a fairly easy task. However as time passes and as you learn and as your skills increase you may want to become a better researcher and learn about additional resources and how to use them. I am at that conjuncture in my research. I am looking to further my skills and find new avenues for my research.
In early November I will be taking my first online genealogy course from the National Institute for Genealogical Studies. The course that I am taking is Electronic Resources: Using the Internet. The syllabus states this course will cover all aspects of using the Internet for family history research, beginning with some of the fundamentals of using the Internet and then moving onto all the many categories of websites that contain potentially useful genealogical information.
Their courses are relatively inexpensive at $89/course. Courses last for six to seven weeks. This is my first venture into online genealogy courses. The National Institute has a complete curriculum in American, Canadian, German, English, Irish. Scottish, and Australian records. They also offer certificates in the same fields. Check out their web page at National Institute for Genealogical Studies for all other details.
As I mentioned this will be my first online course. I will post a review of my thoughts on their course. If I decide to take other courses I will review them also. If anyone has any experience with online courses from the National Institute or any other organization I would like to hear your opinions about them. Thank you in advance.
Doing genealogical research is a fairly easy task. However as time passes and as you learn and as your skills increase you may want to become a better researcher and learn about additional resources and how to use them. I am at that conjuncture in my research. I am looking to further my skills and find new avenues for my research.
In early November I will be taking my first online genealogy course from the National Institute for Genealogical Studies. The course that I am taking is Electronic Resources: Using the Internet. The syllabus states this course will cover all aspects of using the Internet for family history research, beginning with some of the fundamentals of using the Internet and then moving onto all the many categories of websites that contain potentially useful genealogical information.
Their courses are relatively inexpensive at $89/course. Courses last for six to seven weeks. This is my first venture into online genealogy courses. The National Institute has a complete curriculum in American, Canadian, German, English, Irish. Scottish, and Australian records. They also offer certificates in the same fields. Check out their web page at National Institute for Genealogical Studies for all other details.
As I mentioned this will be my first online course. I will post a review of my thoughts on their course. If I decide to take other courses I will review them also. If anyone has any experience with online courses from the National Institute or any other organization I would like to hear your opinions about them. Thank you in advance.

18 October 2013
October Genealogical Conference in Albany
An upcoming genealogical conference is coming to Albany next week. Details are pasted below.
Thursday-Saturday, October 24-26, 2013
The NYG&B is returning to Albany! Join the New York experts, the people who know New York research best, for three days of research and genealogical camaraderie.
Program fee of $170 for members/ $210 for non-members includes:
JOIN US: The program fee, including a dinner, reception, and all other arrangements, is $170 for members, $210 for non-members. Guests for dinner $35.
You may register online at www.newyorkfamilyhistory.org; or email education@nygbs.org; or by telephone 212-755-8532, ext. 211.
ACCOMMODATIONS: We have arranged a special room rate at the Hotel Albany of $110 per night, single or double. Please call the hotel directly at 518-462-6611 and mention group code 1GENE (the NYG&B program) to get this rate.
Thursday-Saturday, October 24-26, 2013
The NYG&B is returning to Albany! Join the New York experts, the people who know New York research best, for three days of research and genealogical camaraderie.
Program fee of $170 for members/ $210 for non-members includes:
- Welcome reception
- Orientations to the NY State Archives and the NY State Library
- A private consultation with a genealogical professional
- Three days of assisted research
- Wine and cheese party
- Gala dinner on October 24 with a talk
- Brainstorming and networking with fellow genealogy researchers at social events
- Reduced rates at Hilton Albany (formerly the Crowne Plaza Albany)
JOIN US: The program fee, including a dinner, reception, and all other arrangements, is $170 for members, $210 for non-members. Guests for dinner $35.
You may register online at www.newyorkfamilyhistory.org; or email education@nygbs.org; or by telephone 212-755-8532, ext. 211.
ACCOMMODATIONS: We have arranged a special room rate at the Hotel Albany of $110 per night, single or double. Please call the hotel directly at 518-462-6611 and mention group code 1GENE (the NYG&B program) to get this rate.
When:
Thursday, October 24, 2013 - 9:00am to Saturday, October 26, 2013 - 5:00pm
Sponsor:
The New York Genealogical & Biographical Society
Labels:
Albany,
genealogy conference,
NYG&B
Location:
Albany, NY, USA
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