Hubbell School ca. 1957 (Courtesy of Swords Family Archive) |
My thanks to the custodians of the Swords Family Archive for lending me this photo of the Hubbell School.
© 2009-2017. All Rights Reserved.
Hubbell School ca. 1957 (Courtesy of Swords Family Archive) |
Nestling snugly down in a valley among green hills, the little village of Rochester presents such a picture of rural repose and idyllic contentment as would inspire the spring poet with a gush of rhapsody. But the repose is only external. ... Every night the homes of the most respected citizens are the scenes of hair-raising performances. Tables dance around the rooms or are broken to pieces, windows are smashed, chairs overturned, while strange objects float through space and weird sounds fill the air.The Free Press story went on to say that a group of Rochester citizens including Commodore George Newberry, village president; Bert Norton, druggist; Charles S. Chapman and his brother, William C. Chapman; and jeweler and optician Louis E. Palmer, Jr. met regularly to conduct seances in an attempt to invite the presence of the spirits of the departed. According to the newspaper, Newberry had once been the greatest of skeptics and dismissed any stories of communication with the spirits of the dead as "pure humbug," but having been converted now hosted regular meetings of what the participants called the "Psychic Research Club" in his home.
Seated around a heavy mahogany table, their hands stretched over its polished surface, the "Research club" awaited the spooks.So, with the club members lighting up and puffing away on their Havanas, the seance continued:
A violent lunge of the table announced an arrival from spiritland.
"Is that you, Quick?" asked Mr. Palmer.
Three slight tippings of the table signified "yes."
Quick's convivial nature is not ignored by his friends in the flesh, so he was asked if he wanted them to smoke. He again answered affirmatively and they all lit their cigars.
The ponderous table began to gyrate as lightly as a French ballet girl and the chandelier was bent while Mr. Palmer's body was lifted over the table into the lap of one of his vis-a-vis.Once Mr. Palmer was returned to his seat by his fellow spirit-seekers, the spirit of "Quick" resumed his mischief:
Finally, according to the testimony of all present the medium's body was wafted to the top of a cabinet seven feet high while he cried in a dazed condition for someone to stop his uncomfortable ascent.
Suddenly there was a loud crash of smashing glass and the helpless body of Palmer was seen sprawling limp on the window sill half through the broken pane, half dangling limply on the inner side.The Spiritualist Movement in the United States emerged in upstate New York in the 1840s, and was fairly prominent through the 1920s, during which time the Ouija board became a popular method of interpreting perceived contacts from the spirit world. Ray Henry, a local historian and direct descendant of Louis E. Palmer, Sr., gave me the back story to this interesting tale and explained how spiritualism was likely introduced to the village of Rochester.
That was too much for the unfortunate medium, and he has refused to call on "Quick" since.
“All of us must be continually impressed with the awe-inspiring first sight of Rochester as we arrive at the top of the hill and start the downgrade ride into the village. So it is with the many visitors and travelers who have occasion to use this highway. After covering miles of city traffic, the traveler rides over flat country without realizing he is going up grade, until suddenly he views “The Heart of the Hills” and gets his heart-throb.”
--Earl Seed, June 2, 1949
"History, in brief, is an analysis of the past in order that we may understand the present and guide our conduct into the future."
--Sidney E. Mead
"History is where the evidence leads us; heritage is what we choose to remember and celebrate."
--Edward T. Lilenthal
"A generation which ignores history has no past and no future."
--Robert A. Heinlein
"History repeats itself because nobody was listening the first time."
--Anon.
"We do not choose between the past and the future; they are inseparable parts of the same river."
--Dr. Walter Havighurst