
Hickok Falls and Water Wheel


I am hoping that one of my Halfway Brook readers has the originals of these postcards and could scan them for me. (For print work I need larger images.)
Also if anyone has any information about the Hickok Falls or the old water wheel and (I assume) sawmill I would appreciate that.
My great-great-great-grandparents Asa and Esther Hinman Hickok and family arrived in Lumberland around 1813, and lived a couple miles above Barryville.
I imagine it was in the area where Hickok Brook meets Halfway Brook. They were my first relatives to arrive in the area.
I am currently working on a story about two granddaughters of David Hickok (brother of Asa) visiting Mary Ann Eldred Austin and Justus Hickok (Asa’s grandchildren) in the town of Highland, New York in 1854.
If you have information or can scan the postcards, please contact me: info (at) halfwaybrook (dot) com. I will give you more details regarding scanning the postcards. Thank you.
Revisiting 1942 Flood in Barryville



I thought my Halfway Brook readers might enjoy the larger images even though a few of these photos have been posted before:
I have rescanned them larger and/or with some tone.
Click on photos twice for largest size.


1940s Barryville from Shohola




1940 Shohola-Barryville Bridge




Photo: H.I. Briggs.
Delaware River at Barryville?

This photo is from my recent finds at my mother’s home. I think it is a view of homes and a garage? in Barryville, possibly Shohola on the Delaware River.
Can any of my Halfway Brook readers help? I assume it was taken around 1940.
Click photos to make them larger.
Update: It is Spring House Garage on River Road in Barryville. Thank you!

Another View of Hawk’s Nest
Recipes from Grandma Briggs

In my vast collection of photos and information related to the Town of Highland, NY, are scans of recipes of my grandmother Myrtie Briggs who lived in Barryville from 1935 to 1945. Her Canadian War Cake was on an earlier post.
Here are a few recipes Grandma had with names of people who lived in the area: Mrs. Lang and Mrs. Steele from Barryville; Mrs. Brodmerkle and Mrs. Clark from Eldred; plus a favorite of mine, Cherry pudding cake, and Chocolate Joy cake, which sounds very good).
Click on the image to make it larger.



1925 Christmas: 36 Dolls


At half past three o’clock on the morning of October 4, 1925, a 1922 Model-T Ford covered with the dust of many states rattled through the Bowne Memorial Gateway of Drew Theological Seminary and came to a labored halt.—Marion Furness.
Not knowing where to go, Irwin pitched the tent right in the middle of the campus. Next morning it caused no small stir. In fact it was in all the papers, even over to London, England.
Laura and Mildred had over 36 dolls sent to them that Christmas. Some of them were packed up and sent to cousins.—Myrtie Crabtree Briggs.
See more on the first part of the story and comment by Drew University Archivist Matthew Beland: August 1925: The Briggs Family Drives East.
I found the photos of the dolls when I visited my mom recently. It was fun to see photos of the “rest of the story”—some of the 36 dolls I had heard about.
References:
Furness: Eastward Ho!, The Christian Student, November, 1925; excerpt from Grandma and Me, p. 28.
Myrtie Briggs: Grandma and Me, pp. 26, 27.
1940 Barryville Group








