Halfway Brook 2021
Recently I was sent the following photos of Halfway Brook in the fall of 2021, that I thought went along with the last post on Freshets and Floods. Special Thanks and Credit: Laughing Water Photos.
Recently I was sent the following photos of Halfway Brook in the fall of 2021, that I thought went along with the last post on Freshets and Floods. Special Thanks and Credit: Laughing Water Photos.
A freshet is a sudden rise in the level of a stream, or a flood, caused by heavy rains or the rapid melting of snow and ice. Freshets were necessary to float the rafts of lumber to market, but they … Continue reading
Around 1764, the year after the French and Indian War, Daniel Skinner built a 15 foot by 80 foot raft from six felled pine trees. Daniel ingeniously lashed these logs (masts for boats), together, added a rudder, and floated the … Continue reading
Kill or Kille Kill/e is Dutch for a creek as in Wallkill or Beaver Kill. Callicoon Creek Dutch hunters named the area Kollikoonkill because there were so many Kollikoon or wild turkeys. Whortleberries Around 1850 George W. Eldred wrote his … Continue reading
In 1798 when it was created, the Town of Lumberland was a rugged wilderness with 300,000 acres of continuous forests, interspersed with ponds, lakes and streams. The brooks and streams flowed into the Delaware River, which was the southwest border … Continue reading
Halfway Brook in the town of Highland, Sullivan County, New York, is a nine mile stream that flows into the Delaware River. At the end of 1815 James Eldred (my great-great-grand-father) settled with his family in a cabin with a … Continue reading
Hello Halfway Brook Friends! My new series: “Revisiting Halfway Brook,” looks back at Halfway Brook posts which started in fall 2009, the year my husband Gary created this site. In September of 2009, as Gary completely remodeled our kitchen (at … Continue reading
Hello Halfway Brook Friends! I hope your 2024 is off to a good start. Gary and I have been enjoying building with logs made by Clydesdale Cabins, in Minnesota. Last night we added Gary’s old Lionel Train set. Here are … Continue reading
On January 8, 1884 Chester Beers (widowed nine years) married Ida M. Taggart. Chester and Ida’s daughter Clara Janet was born September 11, 1887. Chester, Ida, and Clara lived on the 183-acre family farm that Chester inherited. Chester had attended … Continue reading
In the summer of 1879 Emma Austin traveled from Eldred, New York, to live with her brothers Ell and Lon Austin, who lived and worked in Solomon, Kansas. The hope was that the drier climate could cure her TB. Edith … Continue reading