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EIGHT COUNT INDICTMENT IN MIDDLETOWN RAPE CASE

Written By The Mountain Eagle on 10/3/25 | 10/3/25

DELHI – Delaware County District Attorney, Shawn J. Smith, announced today that the Delaware County Grand Jury returned an 8 Count Indictment against Edward Batka, 61, of Fleischmanns on September 26.  Per office policy, the victims’ identities will be kept confidential. 

Count One alleges that Edward Batka committed the Class B Felony of Rape in the First Degree on or about September 1, 2025. That count alleges that the defendant forcibly compelled the victim to engage in oral sexual contact.

Count Two alleges that Edward Batka committed the Class B Felony of Rape in the First Degree on or about September 1, 2025. That count alleges that the defendant forcibly compelled the victim to engage in vaginal sexual contact.

Count Three alleges that Edward Batka committed the Class D Felony of Aggravated Sexual Abuse in the Third Degree on or about September 1, 2025. That count alleges that the defendant forcibly compelled the victim to engage in digital penetration.

Count Four alleges that Edward Batka committed the Class A Misdemeanor of Unlawful Imprisonment in the Second Degree, on or about September 1, 2025.  

Count Five alleges that Edward Batka committed the Class A Misdemeanor of Unlawful Dealing with a Child in the First Degree on or about September 1, 2025. That count alleges that he did cause an alcoholic beverage to be given to a person less than 21 years old.

Count Six alleges that Edward Batka committed the Class B Felony of Rape in the First Degree on or about September 4, 2025. That count alleges that the defendant forcibly compelled the victim to engage in oral sexual contact.

Count Seven alleges that Edward Batka committed the Class B Felony of Rape in the First Degree on or about September 4, 2025. That count alleges that the defendant forcibly compelled the victim to engage in vaginal sexual contact.

Count Eight alleges that Edward Batka committed the Class D Felony of Aggravated Sexual Abuse in the Third Degree on or about September 4, 2025. That count alleges that the defendant forcibly compelled the victim to engage in digital penetration.

Assistant District Attorneys Rachael Collins and Richard D. Northrup Jr. presented the case to the grand jury on September 25, 2025. 

Batka was arraigned in Delaware County Court by the Honorable Judge John L. Hubbard on September 25, 2025. Due to the severity of the offenses alleged, the District Attorney’s Office requested that the defendant be remanded without bail.

District Attorney Shawn Smith commends Investigator Allyson Head and Trooper James Vlahakis of the New York State Police for their thorough investigation into this difficult case. Smith also thanked Safe Against Violence for their advocacy work in this case.  

Indictments and Criminal Complaints are merely allegations.  All defendants are presumed innocent unless proven guilty. 


Shawn J. Smith 

District Attorney 

Delaware County 

 

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Kimchee Harvest’s Growth Comes to Fleischmanns



By Matthew Avitabile

FLEISCHMANNS — Kimchee Harvest has been growing vegetables for the last 22 years in Roxbury and a kitchen the last six years and has now expanded to a growing storefront on Main Street Fleischmanns. The popular farm location joins the expansion or opening of several other businesses in the village this year. The community has had a long history of fermentation even dating back to the original Fleischmanns (of yeast fame) family. Kimchee Harvest's San Mul is the latest iteration of that proud tradition.

Madalyn Warren, along with her mother Ji-Young Kim, her brother Arthur Warren and sister Jenny Warren created the original farm that started it all.

Warren said that she loves the agriculture and people in the area. This includes nature growing in fields, streams, and forests.

“It’s a really vibrant place as far as food,” she said. “Foodwise we’re very rich,” she said of Delaware County.

The decision to open the storefront was a needed “change of scenery,” Warren said.

Having a storefront has been “different” than farm life, she said. She enjoys the increased interactions with people. Prior, the family interacted mainly with people engaged in local food and seasonality, and the “value of eating local food and eating from local farmers.”

The opening of San Mul allows for increased access to healthy, nutritious food to Fleischmanns and beyond. Warren notes that the food is "not only delicious, but accessible and attainable" and offers a chance to "bring our passion and promise to even more people than we are able to at the farm and at markets before."

The new location is an opportunity to introduce new foods and ways of eating to a broader group of people.

“We’re still very much in the producer, seasonality mode,” she said. Working with the public is a different experience.

Visitors will come in as themselves, eat, and leave “energized,” she said. They often leave “fulfilled and ready to take on whatever the rest of the day they’re engaged with.”

This is a change to “be a part of people’s consumption of the food,” Warren said. This includes seeing their happiness after a meal.

This includes New York-produced tofu from Ithaca called Ithaca soy, including for a tofu stew flavored with bean paste.

There are also sweet potato noodles with mixed vegetables. There is also a bibimbap mixed rice bowl. The bibimbap follows Kimchee Harvest’s food ethics of having all food being seasonal and local.

The decision to run a farm and provide food came in part from her family’s experience running an establishment in the Adirondacks. She’s also inspired by the idea of being outdoors and “staying interested in life.”

The original vegetable growing business was challenged by a shorter season. Creating kimchee allowed for a “value added business.” The preservation of kimchi helped to preserve the farm, she said.

Kimchee is created with carrots, rhubarb, sunchokes, cabbage, and more. There are also preserved vegetables, including turnips, dandelion greens, ramps, beets, and more.

Prior to the pandemic, the farm hosted dinners and during, it hosted outdoor picnics.

“We believe in feeding people healthy, nutritious food,” she said.

She  purchased a property in Phoenicia and plans to grow herbs and perennials. Fleischmanns is in the middle, she said.

Next year will see the business expand its offerings and focus on plant-based medicines. These include a number of herbs and roots used in traditional Korean medicine called Toraji. These include Goji berries, ashwagandha, tulsi, among others.

Kimchee Harvest is expanding its harvest, including partnerships with other farmers and chefs to host meals at the location. On Nov. 20, Catskill Fungi will be hosting a dinner and workshop with 14 spots regarding how to cook and eat mushrooms.

The Fleischmanns location is open Friday, Saturday, Sunday, and Monday 10-3pm. The 1109 Main Street location can be reached at 607-242-9780 or via email at madalyn.warren@gmail.com.

 

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Lark in the Park Saturday

CATSKILL MOUNTAINS — The 22nd Annual Catskills Lark in the Park is Saturday, October 4th through Monday, October 13th.

The Catskills Lark in the Park was founded in 2004 to mark the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Catskill Park. The Lark is a series of events celebrating the Park with a full range of offerings across the region. Since its inception, the Lark has brought together thousands of people that have participated in hundreds of events, all aimed at enjoying the recreational assets of the Catskill Park  and Catskill Region. While the main organizing partners are the Catskill Mountain Club, the Catskill Center, the New York Jersey Trail Conference, and the NYS DEC, we couldn’t do it without the enthusiastic participation of so many volunteers.

 

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“Lifting the Veil: The Last Haunting of Kirkside”



ROXBURY – This October, the veil will be lifted at the Kirkside Mansion.

For the first—and last—time before renovations begin, guests are invited upstairs into the hidden halls of the mansion, where no one has ever been allowed to wander. In small groups of 4–6, you’ll follow the Delaware County Paranormal Society into a chilling investigation of Kirkside’s past.

But be warned: lifting the veil comes at a price. The deeper you go, the darker the secrets that surface. Will you cross back into the safety of the night… or will the veil close behind you?

This event is recommended for ages 12+ (under 12 at parent/guardian’s discretion). The upstairs haunted path includes staircases and is not suitable for guests who are pregnant, have heart conditions, mobility limitations, or require wheelchair access. However, a family-friendly area downstairs will be open for those who prefer a lighter, less frightening experience. Groups will move through in time-slotted entries of 4–6 people every 20 minutes for a fully immersive experience.

Opening Night: Friday, October 17th and will run on Saturday, October 18th; Friday, October 24th; Saturday, October 25th with the final night on Friday, October 31st (Halloween)

Advance booking required. Tickets can be purchased at innatkirkside.org

 

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Pi-Amigos Play at MTC Community Hall Oct. 11

PI-AMIGOS: PIANO TRIUMVIRATE will present a concert of Rock Jazz and Classical piano music Saturday October 11, 7PM in Margaretville’s MTC Community  Hall located on Academy St. Admission: free will donation.  Sponsorship: MTC, M-ARK Project Roxbury Arts Group. 

This concert event will be a meeting of the hearts, minds, and hands  of the 3 Pi-Amigos: Justin Kolb, Adam Ippolito, and Loren Daniels.  These three pianists have long admired and supported each other’s  work and have become close friends. This will be an opportunity for  them to explore the classical, rock and jazz music connections, as  friends, as artists and as collaborators and share something unique  with the world. 

The common ground for this concert will be the instrument itself, a  concert grand piano. While they share the piano as this event’s instrument of choice, each of them comes to it with different  experiences, training and education.  

Justin Kolb is a world-renowned classical concert pianist who has  performed to audiences in prestigious venues such as Lincoln 

Center, Kennedy Center, Carnegie Hall and in cities from Budapest  to Santa Barbara.  

Adam Ippolito is the consummate rock keyboardist and vocalist  whose credentials include recording and performing with John Lennon, Elephant’s Memory, Chuck Berry, Kool and the Gang,  Whitney Houston and many other pop and rock legends. 

Loren Daniels is an amazing jazz virtuoso pianist, vocalist,  composer and educator whose experiences on the jazz scene include leading and recording with his own ensembles and skillfully  supporting other jazz artists: Rufus Reid, Calvin Hill, Mike Richmond  and Milt Jackson. 

The three pianists will explore different themes and topics using  specially selected pieces that will highlight their artistic and  pianistic depth, both in individual performances and together at the  keyboard. The program will include a piece for six hands (all three  pianists at once) composed by Peter Schickele, a tango composed  by Robert Cucinotta that will be interpreted using classical, rock and  jazz approaches. Collective renderings of well-known music such as  “Tequila” have also been programmed. The concert will give the  audience a chance to hear very diverse musical musings that reflect  upon our common human experiences. It will also showcase the  keyboard wizardry of three very different and very accomplished  masters. 

Pi-Amigos: Piano Triumvirate - An incredible program that you won’t  want to miss! Please join Justin Kolb, Adam Ippolito and Loren  Daniels.

 

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WESTERN CATSKILLS COMMUNITY REVITALIZATION COUNCIL ENTREPRENEURSHIP BOOT CAMP Oct. 21 in Margaretville

MARGARETVILLE — Western Catskills Community Revitalization Council, Inc. (WCCRC) is hosting its annual  Entrepreneurship Boot Camp, Tuesday, October 21, 2025 from 8:30 am to 6:00 pm at the MTC  Conference Room, 61 Academy Street, Margaretville, NY 12455. Registration fee is $25, and includes lunch and refreshments. The program is partly funded by NYS Homes and Community Renewal, and MTC Birdsall Project. 

The Boot Camp will include a variety of business workshops such as tech and transformation, how  to form a business, insurance and risk management, marketing and branding, and how to write a  business plan. The program also includes a panel discussion on funding, followed by networking and  one-on-one conversations. David Madie, founder of GrowthWheel and co-founder of Bovina Center  Montessori School, will deliver the keynote address titled “Getting the Big Picture: New Ideas for  Growth through a 360º View on Business.”  

Presenters include award-winning business advisor Sam Kandel, Small Business Development  Center; Barbara Puglisi, Economic Development Director, Catskill Watershed Corporation; Lindsay  Whitbeck, Delaware County Economic Development; James Hannahs, Greene County Economic  Development; Julie Pacatte, Schoharie Economic Enterprise Corporation; Margaret Ellsworth,  MARK Project; Anique Morrison, Krystin Woodcock and Sean Land, NBT Bank; Christopher  Slonaker, Market Leader at NBT Insurance Agency; business lawyer Nicholas J. Frandsen; branding  expert Eva Green; and Jacob Johnson, Customer Experience Manager at Margaretville Telephone  Company and founder of Compass Coaching Group.

125 Main Street, Suite A, Stamford, N.Y. 12167 (607) 652-2823 

You can download the program at https://westerncatskills.org/business/entrepreneurship-boot-camp/.  To register, contact Simona David at (607) 652-2823, ext. 102, or sdavid@westerncatskills.org.  

WCCRC Entrepreneurship Boot Camp is an opportunity for both start-ups and existing businesses to  learn, access resources, adapt and grow, and contribute to a thriving local economy.  

Western Catskills Community Revitalization Council, Inc. (WCCRC) is a 501 ( c ) 3 not-for-profit rural  preservation company whose services include housing improvements, financial counseling, business and  economic development, and Main Street revitalization. To learn more, visit westerncatskills.org. 

 

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Art Up Hosts Works by Clorfeine, Thomas

MARGARETVILLE — Last Friday September 26, ArtUp Gallery in Margaretville hosted a reception for their new exhibition: “Going to Ground,” the works of Steve Clorfeine and Nat Thomas. 

Steve Clorfeine and Nat Thomas are seasoned artists whose work spans numerous mediums and explorations. This exhibit, curated by ArtUp Co-Director Patrice Lorenz, focuses on Clorfeine’s clay - small hand-built pots, vases, containers, and platters - and Thomas’s collage.

Thomas’s collages stem from the joy he finds working in his garden. Borrowing from ephemeral materials, he “grows” his blooms in paper, cut and pasted in distinctive arrangements.

Steve’s ceramic pieces are described by the gallery as “all ask[ing] to be held to experience the warmth infused by Clorfeine’s eye and touch”. Indeed, his pieces have a soft or rounded appearance, with a selection of 24 bowls in a case looking like they were chiselled from various Catskills rocks. Some of the vases seem loose and baggy; stamped with fabric stamps and patterned rollers, they look like purses or totes without their handle and that’s part of their charm. The plates are substantial and heavy, but are wavy, reminiscent of floating lily pads, as if they’re welcoming your hand. 

Asked what attracts Steve to clay in particular, he responded: “It’s earth. The clay is coming out of the earth, and it’s very clear to me that it’s connected to any child’s fantasy of what to do with a handful of dirt - mud. Kids are totally fascinated with clay in that way”. 

“I started making pots in 1970 and after a 20 year hiatus, began again at Women’s Studio Workshop in 2003. Hand-building is what I’m drawn to. I’ve had several inspiring teachers along the way and many sculptor/potters I’ve looked to for ideas and possibilities.The artifacts of the potters of ancient civilizations attracted me from childhood museum trips. Later in life, as a performer, teacher and persistent traveler I took the opportunity everywhere I landed to look at and buy ceramics: from highly decorated East Indian and Mexican tiles and containers to Swiss and German mid-century art pottery to classic Native American bowls. Most likely it’s the bowls from Acoma Pueblo in New Mexico which I saw in 1975 that sent me into an ongoing pursuit of ‘pinch pots’. It’s a lowly name for these pueblo traditions”. 

Nat Thomas is a Margaretville-based artist whose multidisciplinary practice spans painting, collage, and quilt-making. He earned a BFA in printmaking from Louisiana State University in 1973 and pursued graduate work in sculpture and theater at LSU. His work has been featured in solo shows at Roxbury Arts Group, Chace-Randall Gallery (Andes), Erpf Gallery (Catskill Center), Enderlin Gallery (Roxbury), and Hopper House Art Center (Nyack). A founding member of Longyear Gallery, Thomas also serves on the Catskill Mountain Artisans Guild and the ARC of Delaware County boards.

ArtUp, 746 Main Street, Binnekill Square, Margaretville, NY 12455. Hours: Friday - Sunday 12pm - 4pm. “Going to Ground” will be on show from September 26 - October 19, 2025. https://www.artupmargaretville.com/exhibition/going-to-ground

 

                                            Image by Jenny Neal - Steve Cloreine ceramics

 

                                            Image by Jenny Neal. Collage by Nat Thomas

 

                            Image by Jenny Neal. Steve Clorfeine and his ceramic bowls

 

                                                    Image of Nat Thomas by Jenny Neal
 

 

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A Conversation about … Novelties

Cucamelon
 
Tithhonia


By Jean Thomas

I'm a sucker for novelties. So my gardens are often a playground, not a serious botanical presentation. In past years I have grown twelve foot tall sunflowers and “walking onions.” There have been trellises loaded with gourds and almost always Cleomes hovering over the smaller plants. I like other plants from the Victorian era, too, like Balsam Impatiens and Nigella, and the  indestructible Wax Begonias. Mass plantings amuse me, and in any given year there may be a couple hundred square foot patch of corn poppies blasting their gorgeous red color at any observers. I am a fan of bulbs from Crocosmia to Colchicum. The massing of their blooms can be a traffic stopper. 

Of course, this year I found a couple of “new” things to grow. My taste for great big flowering plants has included Cleomes and Castor Beans, along with some of the fancy landscape grasses (I call their florets flowers, even though they don't act like those of other plants).  

This year, I had promised a friend a flat of Tithonia rotundifolia, his favorite annual. I picked up a  pack for myself. I had never grown them. Well, they exceeded expectations, both in size and as a butterfly magnet. The common name is Mexican Sunflower, and the plants lived up to the name. Mine were eight to twelve feet tall and looked like big colorful shrubs decorated with orange daisies. Once they started to bloom,they were covered with bees and butterflies, and   regularly bombarded by hummingbirds. They made great cut flowers, too. When it came time to remove one (because the wind had broken a couple of stems) I had to use a strong pruning tool. All these annuals that grow to five feet or more in height develop woody stems. 

Following my impulse to grow novelties, this spring I also planted a vine that is as tiny as the Tithonia is huge. It's a melon, actually, but tastes like a really crispy cucumber dipped in lemon juice. It's called a cucamelon or a Mexican sour gherkin or a mouse melon plant. The scientific name is Melothria scabra, and it is native to Mexico and Central America. You grow it like any other cucurbit. It makes a vine and loves to climb. It's ideal for a trellis and would be happy in a container. The flowers are teeny and yellow, and the leaves look like those of any other squash or melon family leaf, but very dainty. The fruit look like watermelons, except they're the size of a table grape. The plant produces prolifically, so once in fruiting mode, it will yield hands full of bounty. They're great to snack on or tossed into a salad . Most seed companies carry these little guys, and they're easiest from seed.

As I contemplate these two new-to-me novelty plants, I'm already planning for next year. Maybe the Tithonia can be planted along the road... the deer don't like them. And maybe I can plant something to climb up them, like sweet peas ( a friend's suggestion.) Or maybe I can plant a row of trellises with the mouse melons alternating with regular cucumbers. Or I can plant a forest of Cleome and Castor Bean and Tithonia around a patch of grass for the grandchildren to play inside. Or I can find something else in a catalog that needs some TLC. We'll see.

If you have comments or suggestions for future columns, contact me at jeanthepipper@duck.com. 

 

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THE CATSKILL GEOLOGISTS BY PROFESSORS ROBERT AND JOHANNA TITUS - The Glaciers at Twilight Park – Part Two

Last week we visited Twilight Park and found ourselves on the south rim of Kaaterskill Clove. We watched as, 14 thousand years ago, all this was sinking into yet another chapter of the Ice Age. We were the mind’s eyes; we could do such things. Last time we watched as a glacier was coming down the Hudson Valley. It moved south and swelled up to fill all the landscape down there below us. The Hudson River occupies a large valley, so this became an equally large glacier. We looked around and everywhere we looked there had been a baren cold-climate landscape called a tundra. That was about to change. A large mass of ice peeled off of the valley glacier and headed west, up Kaaterskill Clove. That took it past us as we watched.

The glacier swelled up and filled the clove. It was being pushed from behind by ice that extended all the way back to highlands in Labrador. We heard loud cracking sounds and judged that the ice was yanking large masses of bedrock out of the ground. Moving glaciers do that and do it well.

We, the mind’s eyes, rose up into the sky. We looked west and watched as more ice peeled away from the main clove glacier and slowly headed northeast in the direction of today’s South Lake. It would have passed over Kaaterskill Falls except that those falls had not yet been formed. They would come later; it was the glacier that was there now. Next, we looked farther to the northeast. Ice was rising out of the Hudson Valley and passing across the Mountain House ledge. It flowed west and headed towards today’s North Lake.

Now there were two glaciers, and they were heading toward each other. One gouged out the South Lake basin, the other sculpted North Lake. Then the two collided. The collision of two glaciers sounds like an unlikely event, but this was mandated by the local geography, it just happened. The colliding glaciers pushed masses of earth up against each other. Have you been to the North Lake area? Now you know how that peninsula between the two lakes formed. And now you know how the two lakes, themselves, formed.                                           

We are still the mind’s eyes. We rose a few miles into the sky and surveyed all these, the ice age Catskills. We saw a very sizable glacier coming down the Schoharie Creek Valley. It too was on a collision course - with glaciers coming down Batavia Kill, East Creek and West Creek. Then came the most massive collision – between the Schoharie Creek glacier and the one we saw in Kaaterskill Clove. That was where Lexington is today.  See the jagged lines on our illustration.

We rose a few more miles higher into the sky and turned a full 360 degrees.  All around us was this wonderful image of an ice age mountain range. What a privilege it was to see all this - if only in the mind’s eyes.

                                               

Contact the authors at randjtitus@prodigy.net. Join their facebook page “The Catskill Geologist.” Read their blogs at “thecatskillgeologist.com.”


 

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Whittling Away with Dick Brooks - Family

 I had the disadvantage of having grown up in a functional family.  You hardly hear those mentioned these days, probably because they seem to be endangered.  Who knows how rich and famous I'd be today if my parents had left me on a park bench at an early age and I had been raised by pigeons or squirrels.  I'm sure they were tempted but they reared me to early adulthood and never even complained much.

The closest I came to pain and agony in my childhood was supplied happily by my brothers and sister.  The first couple years of life were grand.  I liked being an only child and I thought I was doing a good job at it but suddenly another child appeared.  I was just getting used to him when the next one came and finally our sister came on the scene.  This left me as the oldest of the brood, a position which I learned to rue.   In those distant days before the term sibling rivalry raised it's ugly head, we loved each other while trying in any way we could think up to kill or maim any thing small, moving and related.  

Being the oldest, I learned early that I was responsible for the behavior of the younger members of the brood.  My sister (the only female of the bunch and the youngest) could play my father like a violin.  When she got caught smoking corn silk in a toy corn cob pipe, somehow it became my fault.  I always got paired with her so I could watch over her, which was fine, except that that when she paired up my younger brothers. It resulted in a match not unlike pairing Ivan the Terrible with Captain Kidd.

On one occasion, I spent the morning with my little sister down in the orchard.  We built this really neat little grass hut under an apple tree and were playing house in it when we heard a war whoop and were attacked by wild Indians.  This might have been fun and a good time had by all except for the fact that the "Wild Indians" shot flaming arrows into our grass hut.  I not only had to rescue my sister, I had to put out the fire and then hide the evidence of what had occurred since I knew who would be blamed.

These two middle brigands were incredibly creative and curious individuals.  They decided to experiment one day and see if a cat placed in a paper bag and dropped out of a second story window would still land on its feet in spite of not being able to see where it was going because of the bag.  I became part of the experiment when I came walking up our driveway, I observed them leaning out of the upstairs bedroom window holding a paper bag.  It dawned on me as to what was afoot when the bag shook and emitted a loud yowl.  As I ran towards the house, they released the bag and its unhappy cargo.  Like a true super hero or just the oldest kid who knew he'd catch it if the little ones killed the cat, I made a running dive and in true Willie Mays fashion, I made the greatest catch ever seen by mortal man.  The cat was not impressed with my efforts, clawed his way through the bag and up one side of me and down the other, ran off into the safety of the nearby woods and didn't return for several days.  He never trusted another paper bag as long as he lived.

At family reunions these days, we sit, remember the good old days and wonder how we survived childhood.  That's what families do and as battered and scarred as some of us are, we're still a family. 

Thought for the week--The secret of staying young is to live honestly, eat slowly, and lie about your age.  --Lucille Ball

Until next week, may you and yours be happy and well.

Whittle12124@yahoo.com  

 

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Wearing the Revolution: Schoharie’s Living History Interpreters (Pt 1)

Bonnie Dailey and Vic DiSanto as David and Nancy Williams
 
Vic as David Williams


By Diane Dobry

As the 250th anniversary of the birth of the United States approaches, we are reminded that Schoharie County was a key location for events leading up to the Declaration of Independence and the Revolutionary War. Now is the 250th anniversary of important events here that led New Yorkers to declare and fight for independence.  Local historians and enthusiasts bring these historic events to life for our community, often, doing so in 18th century attire, as a way to embody the time period. But the garments are not simply “costumes,” since a costume is just a modern imitation, with modern fabrics, zippers, or Velcro, not made from natural fabric with the same detail that authentically reproduced clothing is.   

Many presentations and re-enactments are part of New York State’s Path Through History, and promote cultural tourism , encouraging visits to and exploration of museums, parks, and natural spaces important to this region’s history.

Some interpreters in Schoharie County, who represent the past wearing historic attire, educating visitors and locals as they bring early Schoharie to life, are introduced below.

Vic DiSanto

Vic DiSanto, a historian who volunteers at the Iroquois Museum, who is well versed in the history and culture of the Haudenosaunee people (also known as the Iroquois Confederacy) and early American history, frequently portrays and teaches about Revolutionary War hero David Williams. Williams, a Revolutionary militiaman, was one of three key patriots who thwarted the attempted treason by Benedict Arnold when they questioned and arrested Major John Andre, an intelligence officer of the British Army, as he traveled undercover after meeting with Arnold. DiSanto narrates the full story wearing a handsewn linen hunting shirt, linen shirt and waistcoat, breeches, and round hat - similar to what Williams would have worn when he was in the militia. He also gives talks the various flags that were used during the Revolutionary War to represent the confederation, leading to the various versions of the stars and stripes.

DiSanto’s introduction to historic dress reenactment (or costumed interpretation)—which he thought was “too corny to ever do”—was on a visit to Plimouth Plantation in Massachusetts, But he eventually saw value in it when he became Historic Site Manager of John Brown Farm State Historic Site in Lake Placid, NY.  When volunteers dressed in historic attire, he saw that tourists “flocked to [the] volunteers in historic dress like bugs to a light.” It kept visitors interested and engaged, and he began to consider doing it himself.  

In 2020, DiSanto began to research the life of David Williams after taking a tour led by Schoharie historic presenter Jeff O’Connor of Turning Point 1777.  As a result, DiSanto published several articles in the Journal of the American Revolution and began speaking on podcasts and at the Annual Conference on New York State History at the New York State Museum. Having grown up in northern Westchester County, near Tarrytown, where Williams and the other militiamen captured Major John Andre, fueled his interest. DiSanto also lived just 10 miles from where David Williams lived from 1779-1805 before moving to Schoharie County. He has played the part of Williams in Schoharie County and in Westchester County at Reis Park in Somers, Croton Point Park in Croton, and Pierson Park and Scenic Hudson Riverwalk in Tarrytown. 

“I consider myself a historian first and foremost, trying to act out a part of a historic character to get people interested and engaged in history,” DiSanto explains. “Not too long ago the captors were mostly written off as frauds, as highwaymen who got lucky. The climate of opinion seems to be changing and I hope in some small way my scholarship contributed to this.”

DiSanto chooses not to join a battle reenactment unit, a decision he made based on his own experience serving three years as a soldier in the US Army doing the real thing. “It just does not appeal to me,” he said.

Bonnie Dailey 

In Schoharie County, you are likely to see Bonnie Dailey, a Jefferson, NY, native, in a blue calico bonnet and matching dress when she accompanies Vic DiSanto in presentations on militiaman David Williams, filling the role of Nancy Benedict, David Williams’ wife. Dailey also covers other historic periods, and is particularly thrilled to wear high-waisted dresses from the Regency Period (1811-1820) when playing FreeLove Fiske Frisbee, wife of Revolutionary War hero Gideon Frisbee. Both are buried in the family cemetery behind the Frisbee House in Delhi. Dailey has played that role for the Delaware Historical Society in the graveyard behind the Society’s museum house. 

She also portrays a schoolmarm teaching 19th-century classes to modern grade school students at Jefferson’s one-room schoolhouse in reading, writing, and arithmetic the way they would have been taught more than a century ago.

At an upcoming presentation on October 26 at the Jefferson Historical Society, Dailey will portray the mother of Carl Skidmore, a WWI soldier from Jefferson who never came home.  First-person interpreters will read letters sent to and from Carl and his family while he was fighting in the War.  

With a BA in history from the University of Michigan, Dailey has a long history of teaching and presenting historical times and places, from being trained at the Smithsonian where she worked at the National Museum of American History, to her role as a guide in historic dress at the Noah Webster House in Fairfield, CT.  From there, she was trained intensively at Watermark Annapolis historic site, learning American history and the history of Annapolis. After returning to Jefferson, NY, she gravitated to the Old Stone Fort to continue representing living history for the benefit of the public and visitors to the area, and to help people research genealogy. 

 

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