![]() Th ree separate hayfields provided hay for cattle.ĭr. A vegetable garden provided fresh vegetables. An on site generator produced electricity until the mid 1910’s.Ī hennery, dairy, and pig farm were operated into the mid 1920’s. Trees were felled on site, towed to the sawmill, and the lumber was used in the construction of the San and a number of buildings for housing employees. Ezra Bridge, Ruth Jane Powers In the early 1920‘s the Stony Wold Saw Mill was still operational. Picture of Dr Harvey Powers, Medical Director, Dr Ezra Bridge and Ruth Jane Powers taken in about 1927.ĭr. ![]() Ezra Bridge became Medical Director in the 1920’s followed by Dr. Malcolm Lent, a Physician in Saranac Lake, had been Medical Director at Stony Wold in the 1910’s. Grace Griffiths Davies, Sherwood Davies, Train Station in background Lake Kushaqua Train Station Dr. She was transported in a straight eight Packard car and chauffeured between Lake Kushaqua and New York New York Central every spring and fall. Elizabeth Newcomb, founder of Stony Wold, spent her summers at a camp on the Lake and the winters in New York City. Stony Wold Sanatorium There are many memories of the time frame 19 23-1950. This is the type of excitement that we enjoyed in the 1920’s and 1930’s. The driver escaped through the woods and rumor had it that he returned to his residence in Gabriels. Kushaqua residents visited the site finding no intact bottles but a lot of glass. In 1930 a large Buick touring car was being chased by the Feds and it left the road turned over a few hundred feet from the Kushaqua Dam. Residents at Stony Wold were always interested in visiting sites where Revenue Agents were successful in their endeavors. In the 1920‘s it was often utilized by bootleggers to avoid the Revenue Agents. In the early 1920’s the dirt roads between Loon Lake, Lake Kushaqua, Onchiota, Vermontville and Rainbow Lake were narrow and one way in many areas. The station was about ½ mile north of Stony Wold and at the North end of the lake. The Delaware and Hudson operated trains between Saranac Lake and Plattsburgh with a station (flag stop) at Lake Kushaqua. There were at least four trains that operated daily between Utica an d Montreal. Stony Wold Sanatorium was located on Lake Kushaqua on the Adirondack Division of the New York Central Railroad. Wilsey was the grounds superintendent of Stony Wold and was provided housing for his wife and two daughters, Bernice and Ethel. I boarded nearby on the Stony Wold grounds with the Wilsey family as there was no available living space to stay with my mother at the Sanatorium (Stony Wold was for women with TB). ![]() The Stony Wold Postmaster had just died and my Mother was fortunate to be appointed Postmaster in 1923, a position she held until 1958. This is where she had been cured of TB just eight years prior. ![]() She was hired at the Post Office and store at Stony Wold on Lake Kushaqua. He developed TB in 1922 and the family returned to the Adirondacks - Saranac Lake, New York.Įthel Wilsey, Sherwood Davies Ethel Wilsey, Sherwood Davies, digging for worms My Father was admitted to Ray Brook Sanatorium and my Mother sought employment. My Fa ther worked as an engineer for the New York Central Railroad in Syracuse. the son of Howard Davies (1888-1925) and Grace Griffiths Davies (1891-1980). My parents met, married and then moved to Syracuse in 1916. In 1915 my Father was working on the dairy farm in Stony Wold, New York. My Mother was a patient at Stony Wold in 1914. My Grandmother, Sarah Gifford Griffiths (1858-1927), was a patient at Stony Wold in 1905. My family history has many connections to Adirondack Sanatoriums, Stony Wold in particular. Howard Davies, Grace Griffiths Davies, Sherwood Davies Sarah Gifford Griffiths, Grace Griffiths Davies
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