Page 22 - Great Camp Santanoni
P. 22

It seems that every time a cow had a “passage,” my                          the draft horses, and Clifton
                                                                                         Parker, a teamster, boarded
             father was right there with a shovel and a water hose.
                                                                                         with the family, as did various
                         —Rowena Ross Putnam, herdsman’s daughter, 1987                  seasonal laborers hired to

                                                                                         cut firewood or ice or tap the
                                  The People
                                                                                         preserve’s 900 maple trees.
                                  Robert Pruyn encouraged a sense of
                                                                                            The gardener’s cottage,
                                  ownership and pride in his farm staff.
                                                                                         built around 1904 for the farm
                                  Stories abound about the dedication of the                                                            Courtesy Adirondack Museum
                                                                                         manager, later became the home
                                  staff. How the gardener Charles Petoff (left)
                                                                                         of Bulgarian-born gardener Charles Petoff, his wife Penna, their three
                                  insisted on harvesting vegetables himself
                                                                                         children, and a nephew from 1919 to 1931. The shingle-clad house has
                                  for the Pruyns’ table to insure quality. How
                                                                                         typical rustic Adirondack detailing such as peeled cedar porch railings
                                  the herdsman George Ross cleaned the
                                                                                         and eave brackets and deep roof overhangs.
                                  Guenseys’ tails with bleach and water, then
                                                                                            Robert Pruyn probably ordered the last major farm building, the farm
                                  braided and brushed them out in preparation
                                                                                         manager’s house (below), around 1919 from a Sears, Roebuck catalog.
                                  for a visit from Pruyn. How “farm boss”
                                                                                         Between 1909 and 1940, people could purchase house kits from the
                                  Lewis Kinne’s serious demeanor belied the
                                                                                         company in a variety of styles. The houses arrived by railroad boxcar with
                                  immense responsibility he had to guarantee
                                                                                         detailed plans and all the materials required to build them, including the
                                  that the quality of all farm products, from
                                                                                         lumber, roofing and siding, as well as hardware, furnace, and appliances.
                   Courtesy Adirondack     the smoked hams to the butter, met Pruyn’s    Farm manager Lewis Kinne, his wife, Minnie, and a niece occupied the
                  Architectural Heritage  exacting standards.
     20      Isolated from Newcomb town life, the staff at Santanoni’s farm formed       house from 1919 until the farm closed in 1931. Art Tummins, the only   21
                                                                                         employee retained after the farm closed, lived there with his wife, Helen,
          its own community. Though farm work was backbreaking and certainly
                                                                                         until the 1940s, when they moved to the West cottage near the gate lodge.
          monotonous in its routine, the memories of former residents are tinged
                                                                                         Cobblestone masonry in the piers and porch parapets recalls the rustic
          with nostalgia—of harvest-time corn roasts in the field, rides on the sugar
                                                                                         stonework of other buildings on the preserve, but its clapboard sheathing
          beet wagon, sledding on the upper pasture, lively mealtime conversations
                                                                                         differs from the shingles of the other buildings.
          with the bachelor farm hand boarders. Certain farm families spent one or
                                                                                            The stock market crash of 1929 and Robert Pruyn’s declining health
          even two decades as residents, so it is no surprise that their names have
                                                                                         spelled the end for this beloved enterprise. Repairs to the buildings,
          come to be associated with the farmhouses.
                                                                                         fences, and roads, and the purchase of livestock and feed were costly.
             The herdsman’s cottage, home to dairyman George Ross, his wife
                                                                                         When the farm closed in 1931, some members of the farm community lost
                                              Lettie, and daughter Rowena
                                                                                         the only home they had ever known. The Melvin family, who purchased
                                              from about 1922 to 1931,
                                                                                         Santanoni in 1953, never used the farm. When the state of New York
                                              incorporates the farmhouse
                                              (ca. 1850) present when
                                              Robert Pruyn purchased the
                                              farm parcels. Originally a
                                              simple, one-story, timber-
                                              framed structure, it was
                                              renovated as a Shingle Style
                                              bungalow. Three dormers
                                              were added and the roof
          was extended to create a front porch supported on peeled posts; interior
          beadboard finishes were added throughout. Caleb Chase, who cared for
   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27