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Social Dancers: The Haudenosaunee Singers and Dancers May 24

Written By The Mountain Eagle on 5/11/25 | 5/11/25


HOWES CAVE — Experience the energy and tradition of Haudenosaunee social dances performed by the Haudenosaunee Singers and Dancers from Onondaga at the Iroquois Museum on Caverns Road in Howes Cave Saturday, May 24, with dances at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.

Led by Sherri Waterman-Hopper—an internationally recognized artist and cultural speaker—the group features a core of seasoned singers, musicians, and talented young adults. Hopper, a respected designer and seamstress, also shares insights into the construction and cultural significance of traditional outfits.  Included in Museum admission.

 

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Soup Buffet a Hit



The Spring Soup Buffet at Charlotteville Schoolhouse was noon until sold ou with a total of 16 soup varieties on May 4. Photo by Karen Cuccinello.

 

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Spring Afternoon Tea at Brimstone

By Alexis Pencar

SHARON SPRINGS - Have you ever wanted to have traditional afternoon tea just in time for Spring? Enjoy a quaint afternoon with friends at Brimstone Bakery in Sharon Springs for their upcoming Spring Afternoon Tea scheduled for Wednesday, May 14th at 2:00 PM. 

This Spring Afternoon Tea service includes an extra special menu of savory tea sandwiches, an assortment of freshly baked scones served with house-made clotted cream & jam, and a variety of spring inspired cookies, tea-breads, & sweets. A premium loose-leaf tea selection is offered with exotic blends like Black Ceylon Orange Pekoe, Sencha Sumire Green, Egyptian Goddess, and more!

The Spring Afternoon Tea experience at Brimstone rings true to traditional afternoon tea, which is a refined and elegant ritual that originated in the 1940s in Britain, credited to Anna, the Duchess of Bedford. Enjoyed between lunch and dinner, it features a delicate selection of finger sandwiches, scones with clotted cream and jam, and an assortment of pastries and cakes, all accompanied by a pot of freshly brewed tea. 

To reserve your spot for this upcoming Spring Afternoon Tea Service, Wednesday May 14th at 2:00 PM, call the Bakery, or check out their website. This event is sure to sell out so make your reservation today! Tickets are $30 per person.

Don’t forget, Brimstone Bakery’s Owner Anthony Leberto is proud to “offer catering for all occasions and budgets” providing options previously unavailable or unattainable in this area.

Brimstone Bakery is located at 922 Chestnut Street Sharon Springs, NY 13459. Open 8:00 AM - 3:00 PM, Wednesday - Saturday, with new hours starting May 13th - 8:00 AM - 3:00 PM, Tuesday - Saturday. Visit www.brimstonebake.com or call (518) 284-6093 for more information.

 

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SSCS Clay Target Team Holds 1st in Standings

Congrats to SSCS on another great week!! Still holding the #1 spot in the overall standings!


By Alexis Pencar

The Sharon Springs Central School Clay Target Team had another great week for their Spring season this past week! They are holding the spot for first in the Overall Team Standings! Don’t forget, they are the first Clay Target Team in Schoharie County and are now in the Class 2A Conference 6. 

The results are in for the second week of competition for SSCS! 

Overall Team Standing:

#1 Sharon Springs Central with 1,464.00

#2 Caledonia-Mumford High School with 1,411.00

#3 Wayland-Cohocton Central with 1,342.00

#4 Watkins-Glen High School with 1,142.00

#5 General Brown High School with 1,110.00

#6 Voorhesville High School with 1107.00

#7 Pavilion High School with 425.00

Top 25 Males in our 7-school conference:

#5 Kyle Golden - 22.25

#6 Reed VanValkenburg - 22.25

#9 Levi Knapp - 22.00

#9 Dalton Oliver - 22.00

#15 Sean Shults -  21.50

#15 Joe Berube - 21.50

#20 Hunter Bolster - 21.00

#21 Jackson Ryder - 20.75

#25 Aiden Bowerman - 20.00

Top 25 Females in our 7-school conference:

#7 Ava Bissonette - 18.75

The SSCS Clay Target Team would like to thank ALL of their amazing sponsors for this 2025 season! Check out the upcoming Competition Schedule: May 10 at 9 AM, May 17 at 9 AM, May 24 at 9 AM.

On June 14th from 9:00 - 2:00 PM there will be a “Spring Turkey Shoot” at the Sprout Brook Rod Club that students will assist in hosting. This event is open to the public and there will be multiple competition types with prizes too! This is a family friendly event. *Note: no live turkeys are used in this event.

Interested in finding out more about the team? Check them out on Facebook at SSCS Clay Target Team or even on Youtube @SSCSclaytaget. Any and all are welcome to come on down to Sprout Brook Rod and Gun Club (1364 State Highway 163 Canajoharie NY) to support this growing team! 

 

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Local History - Thanksgiving in Cobleskill, 1915

Below continues our view into local history through local press by our student intern Wildert Marte.

By Wildert Marte

COBLESKILL — When I read through the Cobleskill Index from Thanksgiving week in 1915, I was expecting festive headlines and stories about turkey dinners, maybe a cheerful church service or two. But what I found instead was something much more real. The paper wasn’t trying to dress the day up, it was just showing what life looked like that week. Some parts felt joyful, others were heavy, and a lot of it sat somewhere in the middle. What stood out most was how people in Cobleskill marked the holiday while still going through their usual struggles, joys, and routines.

The biggest headline came from Warnerville, where a man named Reuben Rossman had taken his own life just a few days before Thanksgiving. The story was simple but sad. He had lived with his sister, who had passed away the year before, and people close to him believed he had grown lonely since then. On Saturday morning, he shot himself twice, once above the heart, and once near the stomach. He was rushed to Albany Hospital but died not long after arriving. It was a heavy way to open a holiday paper, but it reminded me that not everyone was gathering around the table or feeling thankful. For some people, this time of year brought more pain than comfort. But there were brighter stories too. One was about a small wedding at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Wright in Central Bridge. Their daughter, Hazel Belle Wright, had just married Harry Saddlemire under an arch of evergreens and white ribbon. She wore a white crepe de chine dress, and after the ceremony, they left for a short honeymoon through Schenectady, Buffalo, and Niagara Falls. Reading about it, I could picture the decorations, the guests crowding into the family home, and the sense of warmth and hope that still existed even during uncertain times. That same week, Jacob and Jane Hillsinger of Carlisle celebrated their fiftieth wedding anniversary. They were both 71 years old. Jacob played his violin for the guests, and Jane, who the paper said was once known as one of the best dancers around, joined in with a few steps. I liked that detail. It wasn’t about impressing anyone. It was just a couple who had been through decades together still finding joy in small things.

Not everything that week was about celebration. A young girl named Mildred Letts came down with scarlet fever, and her home was placed under quarantine. There was also a runaway carriage accident involving Mrs. Jonas Platner of Seward. She was seriously hurt and taken to Cooperstown Hospital. It made me think about how hard it must have been back then to handle medical emergencies over long distances, no ambulances, and very little control over the outcome. There were also quiet details about normal life guests arriving from Albany and Gloversville for the holiday, a Thanksgiving church service attended by multiple ministers, and schoolchildren getting ready for a Christmas play in a few weeks. These things didn’t jump off the page, but they helped paint a picture of a community that was still doing what it could to come together.

In my research, I also came across President Woodrow Wilson’s national Thanksgiving proclamation for 1915. It wasn’t printed in the Index, but I thought it added useful context. He talked about how, even though war was spreading across Europe, the United States had been blessed with peace and prosperity. He called on Americans to pause and be thankful not just for comfort, but for the chance to stay out of conflict and help others. His words felt calm but serious, like he understood how quickly things could change. Looking back at that issue now, what struck me most wasn’t just what people were doing for Thanksgiving, but that they were finding ways to keep going. Some were celebrating new beginnings, others were carrying sadness, but all of them were holding on to something familiar. That’s what the holiday seemed to mean in Cobleskill in 1915 not escaping life, but facing it together.

 




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Searching for the Perfect Gift for Mother’s Day? The Studio for Art and Craft Has You Covered!

Class projects example wall in The Studio for Art and Craft: Home & Garden Stoneware on 5/15, Wire Wrapping on 5/10, Kids Night Out that happened on May 2nd, Mother’s Day on Main Street on 5/10, and Peacock Stoneware on 5/29.

Some of the current pottery wall items you can stop in and paint at The Studio for Art and Craft anytime Monday-Saturday from 12 NOON – 6:00 PM and every Sunday from 12 NOON – 4:00 PM.


By Heather Skinner

COBLESKILL - Mother’s Day always falls on the second Sunday in May, which is May 11th this year. There are all kinds of mothers to celebrate on Mother’s Day; a holiday that happens today because of a mother named Ann Reeves Jarvis, and her daughter, Anna Jarvis. Ann Reeves Jarvis organized groups of mothers to provide aid to both Union and Confederate soldiers in West Virginia during the Civil War. Ann Reeves was inspired by the mothers and wanted a special day to thank them, which her daughter campaigned for by sending letters to officials after the passing of her mother. May 10th,1908 was the first documented Mother’s Day celebration. In 1914, Mother’s Day was proclaimed a National Holiday by President Woodrow Wilson.

Owner of The Studio for Art and Craft, Jacqui Hauser said, “We love to offer special programs around Mother's Day (and Father's Day) to give families a way to spend time together, learn new things together and create memories.”

Registration is open for Mother’s Day weekend events that both kids and adults can participate in at The Studio for Art and Craft. On Friday, May 9th, from 6:00 PM - 8:00PM will be the Flower Garden Stakes program, where participants will be making clay and/or fused glass plant markers. On Saturday, May 10th, from 1:00PM – 3:30 PM, Mother’s Day on Main Street attendees will go next door to Mineral Springs Soap to make soap and then come back to The Studio to make a clay soap dish. Then, on Sunday, May 11th, from 2:00 PM – 4:00 PM, you can join Tish Czachor from The Studio for the Mother’s Day Stoneware Glaze & Sip at Wayward Lane Brewing Co. 

If you can’t make any of these events, one of The Studio’s newest employees, Pam Chrysler, said grownups, kids and college students have been coming in to make plates with messages, mugs, and planters, while kids are especially enjoying making a lot of handprint crafts and mosaics for mom.

Chrysler loves that people come to hang out, and don’t even have to stress about finishing projects in 1 sitting. Pam also said that the Studio for Art and Craft staff are there and happy to help and guide customers with techniques for painting pottery pieces. The Studio is open for those walk-in projects every Monday-Saturday from 12 NOON – 6:00 PM and every Sunday from 12 NOON – 4:00 PM.

Not everyone celebrates a holiday on the day-of due to reasons like coordinating schedules or class registration filling up. If you miss the Mother’s Day weekend events that The Studio for Art and Craft is offering, it’s never too late to treat mom to their other upcoming classes, including Intro to Stained Glass at Helderberg Brewing Tap Room on May 18th, Intro to Stained Glass at Middleburgh Winery on May 22nd, Freestyle Wire Wrapped Stone AND Ring on May 24th, Peacock Stoneware @ The Studio on May 29th, and Paint with Bunnies on May 30th. Hauser added another gift option saying, “sometimes people choose to give a class gift certificate.”

Though Chrysler hasn’t been working at the studio for long, she said that recognizing repeat faces returning to work on pottery already has been something great to see. Chrysler added that lots of moms work at the studio, including herself, who can’t wait to bring her own kids in to enjoy creating at The Studio. Chrysler enjoys seeing how everyone works together and described the environment of The Studio for Art and Craft by saying, “It’s a family, really.” 

Father’s Day 2025 will be on June 15th, so remember to keep watch for the fun classes, activities, and paintable pottery options that will become available next! Hauser explained with their events they aim to make, “opportunities for families to create together or for people to make gifts to give.  We choose projects that can be successful for all ages - to make it easy for families to enjoy their time together.  For example, the fused glass plant markers can be made with kid-safe glass or adults can cut and shape glass.  Stoneware is fun because it's all about choosing your color combos and then seeing what the kiln does with your pattern.”

The Studio for Art and Craft is located at 576 E Main Street in Cobleskill, their phone number is (518) 823-4053, and you can easily register for classes with open spots on the Classes & Programs page of their website at thestudioforartandcraft.com




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Tiny Home Project Leaves Solid Foundation of Knowledge at BOCES

Dalton Porter


SCHOHARIE – Students in the Capital Region BOCES Career & Technical Education Building Trades and Electrical Trades programs are creating a solid foundation of educational knowledge last school year with the construction of tiny homes.

Students in Matt Hitchcock’s Building Trades program on the Schoharie Campus were joined by their peers in teacher Curtis Van Steele’s Electrical Trades program in developing the blueprints, framing, roofing, building, plumbing and electrical wiring for a 24-foot, by nearly 12-foot house. 

Earlier this year they completed construction of the first home and started work on their second home while the sale of the first home to a local business is being finalized.

“The project is a perfect project for students to test their skills and put the knowledge they have learned to the test,” said Hitchcock. 

Students concurred. 

“I have learned how to frame a house, do a roof and floor supports, frame a shed, basically I have learned everything I need to know to build a house,” said Building Trades senior Nick Hyatt.  

“You feel proud that you have built something that someone will live in one day,” the Schoharie student added. 

Classmate Dalton Porter said the project not only allows you test skills, but also solidifies the knowledge.

“Being able to be hands-on with a real project and learning how to fix all types of problems. There’s no better way to learn something than to have to fix a problem,” the Middleburgh student said.

Meanwhile, Electrical Trades students said the work put a charge in their learning.

“It’s also a good test of our skills because we learned about codes and how to wire residential construction. It’s also closer to what I want to do when I graduate and closer to the reality of a worksite,” said William Hausler, a Guilderland senior.

Offered on the Albany and Schoharie campuses, the Capital Region BOCES Career & Technical Education Electrical Trades program teaches students the fundamental skills in electrical theory through classroom instruction and hands-on shop lessons. Through this training, they can become successful residential, commercial and industrial wiring professionals.

 

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Two SUNY Cobleskill Students Honored with 2025 Chancellor’s Awards for Student Excellence

Christopher
Gilces


COBLESKILL – Two SUNY Cobleskill seniors, John Christopher (Bronx, NY) and Cristian Gilces (Fresh Meadows, NY), have been honored with 2025 Chancellor’s Awards for Student Excellence (CASE) as part of SUNY’s annual student recognition showcase. CASE is the highest honor awarded to SUNY students who have best demonstrated academic excellence and leadership. 

Graduating with a 4.00 GPA in Fisheries and Aquaculture, Christopher has earned multiple honors, including the President’s List in each of his semesters, the Outstanding Student Award in his major, and the Academic Achievement Award for highest GPA in his major. As a Teaching Assistant and President of the American Fisheries Society student chapter, his efforts have increased engagement and access to professional opportunities for his peers. His leadership in conservation work, research collaborations, and work with the U.S. Geological Survey and SUNY Research Foundation speak to his passion for environmental stewardship and embody the values of SUNY Cobleskill.

Gilces is a dedicated student leader and peer role model, serving as SGA treasurer and former president, managing significant budgets and advocating for student interests. He has enhanced opportunities for underrepresented students in agriculture as President of MANRRS, and his efforts on behalf of his fellow students include increased accessibility to hygiene products and increased awareness and engagement with DEIJ-focused events. Gilces mentors high school students as part of SUNY’s Empire State Service Corps and serves as the Village of Cobleskill’s first Liaison of Student and Community Engagement, strengthening ties between students and the community.

“SUNY represents academic excellence, and our students have worked tirelessly to not only excel in their academic studies, but also stepped up as community leaders,” said SUNY Chancellor Dr. John B. King. “Congratulations to this year’s CASE awardees who’ve distinguished themselves amongst their peers through their work ethic, determination, and commitment to their fields of study.” 

"John and Cristian manifest the exceptional talent and ambition that define our student leaders. Through John's conservation work and Cristian's efforts to build stronger campus-community connections, they show the real-world impact our students can achieve,” said Dr. Marion Terenzio, President of SUNY Cobleskill. “Their accomplishments reflect our institution's mission to develop leaders who are academically prepared to meet future and contemporary challenges while being deeply committed to making meaningful contributions to society and our environment." 

Systemwide, 193 students from 63 SUNY campuses were honored.

 

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Putting the “Community” in Cobleskill Community Library’s Plans for the Future

Mohawk Valley Library System’s Community Engagement & Communications Specialist, Wade Abbott, asking community members about what they would like to see for the future of the community and for the future of the Cobleskill Community Library.
Cobleskill Community Library Director Kim Zimmer with long-time Trustees Fred Barnes and Julia Walter holding the Conceptual Renderings of rooms for the Library Expansion Project. Additional Trustees in attendance included Virginia Downs (15 years of service), President Rebecca Leggieri (3 years of service), and Cindy Barton (who has been on the board for 1 year,” and it’s fun!”) Trustees generously provided attendees with a full table of water, snack bags, and cookies to enjoy during the meeting.

The new Community Room will contain a specially made quilt that Library staff has seen glimpses of and have hanging on the wall in the rendering of what the room will look like.


By Heather Skinner

COBLESKILL - Between April 23rd and May 3rd, the Cobleskill Community Library held four open discussions for shaping the Library’s Plan of Service, which was first created through virtual community meetings five years ago. At the third meeting on May 2nd, there was a good turnout and Trustee, Fred Barnes, was delighted that parents had been bringing young kids to the meetings, who he said shared such dynamic ideas!

Attendees were split into two groups to tour the renovations with Director Kim Zimmer and to go over questions with Mohawk Valley Library System’s (MVLS) Community Engagement & Communications Specialist, Wade Abbott. MVLS supports the 14 libraries in Schoharie, Schenectady, Fulton, and Montgomery counties.

The tour took place along the 1st floor of renovations, and the 2nd floor of each room was explained from below because the layout is the same on both floors. Starting at the emergency exit that was modified in the initial restoration, groups were then shown a chimney that will be broken through to connect the renovated side’s hallway to the existing library. There will be a similar doorway on the 2nd floor. The downstairs hallway will one day be lined with Schoharie County Arts created artwork, while the upstairs will have display cases for historical items. 

Past the janitor closet and bathroom will be the new Create Space to accommodate art events, which get the highest attendance numbers. Zimmer held photo renderings that were made with a design team to imagine furnishings in each room. A metal structure within the Create Space, that can also be accessed from the hallway, will be a supply closet upgrade from their current, tiny supply closet in the basement. The supply closet’s walls will have cabinetry and sinks within the Create Space, and the center of the room will have worktables. There was applause and audible, “Yay!” exclamations as Zimmer announced the 2nd floor above the Create Space is where the new History Room will be migrating to. The History Room’s storage area will be behind a floor-to-ceiling bookcase of history-related materials, and the room will be a place for people to do research; there will be computers and lockers to store personal items while doing work. 

During hazmat remediation, the discovery of extra doors saved them from having to pay for brick removal to create new doors, and the upstairs doorway will provide safer access to the attic for staff which currently can only be accessed with a very steep ladder in the history room closet and requires lots of upper body strength to push insulation out of way, then pull themselves up through the opening.

Funding with the NYS Historic Preservation EPF Grant requires the library to keep their tin ceilings, which made the patron who asked about them very happy. Due to damage and missing pieces on the 2nd floor ceiling, remaining pieces will be used to make repairs to the downstairs ceiling, the tin ceiling will be replicated on the 2nd floor, and they anticipate the ceilings will be repainted. In renderings, sound buffering materials were hanging to help with the loud noises tin can create.

It is currently unknown how many times the floors have already been refinished, so those that can withstand being refinished will be, while other floors may need to be covered or replaced. They are trying to maintain features that are currently there wherever possible.

All windows have all been replaced, insulated, and UV protected by Millwork in Sharon Springs. The windows will be operable, and natural light won’t have to be blocked with shades for heating and cooling purposes.

Attendees entered the next room through what used to be a chimney to see what will be a much bigger Teen Space than the current tiny corner they have upstairs, and a much bigger bathroom being made specifically with families in mind who visit with strollers and multiple children. The window in the bathroom will be covered to allow light in, while still blocking the parking lot from seeing in. The vision for the Teen Space includes lots of seating, computers, and a gaming area. A window on the opposite side of the room will allow Youth Services to see into the Teen Room and into the new Children’s Room. Above the Teen Space will be a Multipurpose Room for videos, movies, art exhibit space, and for businesses to rent out to conduct training (even outside of library hours once the elevator gets installed).

The current Children’s Room, immediately on your left when you walk into the library, will be moved into a much bigger space next to the Teen Room. It will also offer more seating space, computers, and room to spread out the children’s book collection. Above the Children’s Room will be the Community Room, which will host similar events to the Multipurpose Room, and can also be used for story times, lectures, author talks, events, workshops, presentations, and early voting. It will also make a perfect spot for sitting and reading when there aren’t any events going on; Zimmer described the view as gorgeous because the room and windows are up in the trees.

Last stop on the tour was the space that will replace the Staff Workroom, as the current staff area will be lost after breaking through the connecting wall between the renovated area and existing library. There will also be a staff bathroom, and doors that connect to the Children’s Room, the new Circulation Area, and a door to the outside with a stained-glass window above it. That door to the outside will not be used on a regular basis by staff and will not be patron-accessible. The State’s Environmental Protection Fund has required the library to keep the staircase in the room, so that will lead staff up to their desperately needed break room, and they won’t have to eat lunch at their desks anymore. Kitchen access will be available for coffee during some workshops. There is a door to the basement through the staff room; they will not be doing basement renovations at this time.

When asked about renovation timeframes for usable rooms, Zimmer anticipated the end of this year, beginning of next year, and furnishings will be added room by room. Half a million dollars is still needed to be raised for furnishings, and they still need to do the floors, ceilings, insulation, sheetrock, and paint, which will require another million.  They don’t plan on going to the community for another bond, which Zimmer said not only puts a lot of pressure on herself, but also on the board, Lamont Engineers, and the community to raise the funds needed to complete the project through grants and donations. Barnes brought up the successful removal of asbestos and said, “Kim and her staff deserve a tremendous amount of credit.” Barnes continued, “It’s very impressive what they did. This building was really let go and there was a lot of damage and Kim’s a little too modest. I mean, I know there is a lot more money that’s necessary to get everything so that people can come in and use, but she’s done a fantastic job getting to this point and she really deserves a lot of credit. As a board member, I’m not worried about the fact that we’re going to get more from grants and things as well as the community as we move forward.” 

Zimmer replied, “I say this all the time, we would not be at this stage without the town. When I realized the cost of the hazmat remediation and the fact there was no way the library would have ever been able to fund that, my conversations with the town, they really stepped up and they applied for a CDBG grant for us and I can’t say enough about the town and what they did and you (Barnes) and RJ really keeping on top of checking in and seeing how we were doing. We would not be at this stage if the town did not help us with that, so that has really gotten this project off the ground and to where we are now.”

Now it’s your turn to dream big, make a wish for your community, and help shape the future of the Cobleskill Community Library! Even though there aren’t any more in-person meetings scheduled, Zimmer said their online survey will be available to fill out until the end of May at https://bit.ly/CommunitySurvey25

The survey link first takes you to a “Destination Preview Page” where you can either click on the survey destination link, or wait a few seconds for the countdown to finish and automatically direct you to the survey page. Please take the time to go to the survey and tell the library your answers to these very thoughtful questions: 

Describe your community in just a few words. 

What does your community need, especially given the changes over recent years? 

How could the library meet your needs and the needs of your family and friends? 

Have you seen, or are you aware of the library's expansion plans?

If you are aware of the expansion plans, what are you excited about? 

If you are not aware of the expansion plans, what would you like to see included in the expansion? 

Is there anything else that delights you or concerns you about The Community Library that you would like to share with the Trustees as we embark on creating our next Long Range Plan of Service? 

Please provide your email address if you would like to be updated when the Long Range Plan of Service is complete.

 

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