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News

9Th Annual Erin Dewyea Turkey Trot back in person this Thanksgiving

Dan McClelland

The 9Th Annual Erin Dewyea Turkey Trot is returning in person this year, and organizers couldn’t be happier.

The race will be held on Thanksgiving morning, 11/24/2022 at the Tupper Lake Christian Center 102 Main Street in Tupper Lake. The doors will open at 8:30a.m. with the race to start at 9a.m. The cost to register this year is as follows:

$35 for the 10K run, and $25 for the 5K run and walk.

There will be prizes for the first place 10K male and female runner, first place 5K male and female runner and walker, as well as prizes for the best individual costume, team costume, and child costume and even a prize for the “turkey who got away” (last place).

Thanks as always goes out in advance of the event for all the community’s support in helping Erin’s family and friends continue honor her memory. The continued support is greatly beneficial in funding Erin’s scholarship fund as well as all of her passions around the community of Tupper Lake.

For those interested in registering, organizers are accepting cash, check, Venmo, PayPal and Cash App as forms of payment. Please contact Nicole Boyer at 315-730-0119. You can call or text her at any time. This year’s organizers look forward to seeing everyone on Thanksgiving morning.

VFW leader urges young veterans to get involved

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

At Friday’s Veterans’ Days service at the Park Street war memorial, it was VFW Post Commander Tracy Luton’s turn to host the observance. She used that opportunity to encourage young veterans here to join the local veterans’ organizations here to help stage events like Friday’s.

Each year the leaders of the five veterans posts here rotate the oversight of Memorial Day and Veterans Day, and serve as the masters of ceremonies.

Welcoming the guests that cool morning VFW Commander Luton began by asking the definition of a veteran.

“A veteran, whether active duty, discharged, retired or reserve is someone who at one point in his or her life wrote a blank check, made payable to the United States of America for an amount to and including his or her life. That’s a veteran!

“Some gave all. Some gave some. You know that, right? So look around and thank a veteran today!”

She paid recognition to a group of high school students who recently took the old podium used at past observances here and in their shop classes restored it. She was standing behind the refurbished speakers’ stand.

“So I want give Tupper Lake Technology Education a shout-out, and particularly students Luke Robillard, Wyatt Godin and Tyler LaPlante” for restoring the podium. The flag on its side was painted by Kendall Kenniston and Lee Ann Stevens. “They all did a great job!”

She also had a strong message for the younger veterans of the community. “You guys have to start stepping up. We’re aging out,” she said of her colleagues currently active in the local veterans posts. “If you want things like this to continue on Memorial Day and Veterans Day, you are going to have to start” coming into the VFW post and the groups here which use it as their headquarters, “and sign up!”

“Many of our board members are passing away, or getting sick. I’m one of the youngest ones at the VFW right now!”

She said most people here who organize these veterans events each year are not even veterans, “but they help out a lot.” She was referring to the VFW post bartenders and the many volunteers.

“If you are a veteran, get your butts up to the VFW and join...and start helping out!

She said staging the annual events are getting more and more difficult for the aging veterans here to tackle. She pointed everyone to the dozen or so elderly veterans- a few in their nineties- all standing proudly next to each other along the recently recoated State Theater wall.

Ms. Luton said if younger veterans don’t soon take over the reins of these various veterans groups here, these special events will soon cease.

“-And that’s a sad thing to say. But we need you younger guys to step up!”

She said she often hears from people fresh out of the military that they intend to become involved with veterans activities here. “Well then do it! We need you to do it!”

She said there was a big gap between the Vietnam War and later Desert Storm and Desert Shield, Iraq and Afghanistan. “But it’s time for those veterans to come forward and help us!”

The town councilwoman said she often hears from young veterans here that the VFW Post on Park Street is “just a bar.” She said it’s much more than that! “We do a lot, we give a lot, we host many functions!”

“Get out there and start doing your part,” she said to all the young veterans of our community. “Don’t tell me you don’t have the time. Make the time!”

At the close of Friday’s service she paid special recognition to the work of Brent Cook and Mary Kay Kucipeck, two volunteers who care for the veterans park. “They did a great job again getting everything ready for today, and sprucing things up here. They do a great job all year long!”

She also invited the crowd back to the VFW Post for refreshments. She thanked the residents who attended that morning’s ceremony and supporting the local veterans. “It’s a great place to be… Tupper Lake!”

Tupper Lake Red & Black Players present two one-act plays that explore identity: “Hoodie” and “Discovering Rogue”

Dan McClelland

The Red and Black Players of the Tupper Lake Middle/High School will present two one-act plays that explore identity, Hoodie and Discovering Rogue, on Wednesday and Thursday, Nov. 9 and 10, in the TLMHS auditorium. Both performances start at 7 p.m., and admission at the door is $7 for adults, $5 for students and seniors, with 5 and under free.

Middle schoolers face a tornado of questions every day. “What do I wear? What if I wear the wrong thing? What is she wearing? What do I look like? Stop looking at me!”

Hoodie, by Lindsay Price, examines image and appearance in the vignette style and poses what may be the most difficult question of all: “Do I stay in the clump or do I stand alone?”

This play features a group of 29 middle schoolers. Cast members are Ash Barber, Kianda Boudreau, Jeevika Branchaud, Eliza Bujold, Sawyer Clark, Erin Collins, Brittany Curry, Scout Ellis, John Fallon, Gabby Frenette, Lucy Frenette, Odessa Holmes, Raegan Hudak, Charlie Kavanagh, Yana Kucipak, Dean LaVigne, Aubrey Nadeau, Lacey Pickering, Rylee Preston, Jackson Rice, Bryce Richer, Lyla Robillard, Oliver Roberts, Lawrence Sears, Rain Skiff, Noah Switzer, Blake Wagner, Lily Wilber, and Mariah Young. Crew members are Jackson Dukette, Kaileigh Dukette, Ava Facteau, Rylee Kennedy, Nicholas LaPlante, and Claire Snye.

In Discovering Rogue by Christian Kiley, Rogue lives in a cardboard box but she doesn’t mind. Others want Rogue to leave but she isn’t budging. It's a showdown of stereotypes and self-identity. This play features a group of 18 high schoolers. Cast members are Meika Nadeau, Raegan Fritts, Hannah Barber, Sophia Staves, Robert Paige, Ayden Rabideau, Nevaeh Toohey, Dane O’Connor, Ghost Switzer, Haylee Callaghan, and Antwon Gachowski. Crew members are Genna Carmichael, Alliyah Lawrence, Michael Baker, Jack LaQuay, Allison Richer, Hannah Callaghan, and Vivian Allen.

Discovering Rogue is directed by George Cordes and Hoodie is directed by TLMHS Choral Director Elizabeth Cordes and Danielle LaMere, with lighting by David Naone. Both plays are presented through a special arrangement with Theatrefolk. There will be a short intermission between these one-acts.

The TLMHS auditorium is located at 25 Chaney Avenue in Tupper Lake.

Mayor encourages community to stay calm in face of rash of crimes

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

The recent incident where police found a burned out truck off McCarthy Street on October 16 generated some comments about public safety from Mayor Paul Maroun at the October 19 village board meeting.

State police in recent weeks identified the body of the man found in the wreckage of the black 2009 GMC Sierra as Ross L. Goodenough, 72.

There had been rumors in the community shortly after the truck was found that foul play was involved.

A pathologist at Ellis Hospital in Schenectady in an autopsy in the days following the discovery of the body determined the cause of death as smoke inhalation.

“I talked with the chief and although it was not in our jurisdiction,” we have received many calls from the community, in addition to the many calls from the media in the North Country, the mayor began that evening.

“We don’t believe there is an imminent danger to anyone in the community, based on what happened down there!”

Chief Eric Proulx echoed that comment.

“As you know, however, there are other issues in the community,” he added, pointing to a growing frequency of drug-related crimes in Tupper Lake this year.

The mayor concurred “there are troubling issues in the community” right now.

The chief elaborated somewhat. “We have two active investigations” of crimes within the last week where “accelerant” was placed on two houses in the middle of the night and lit on fire. “That’s the kind of stuff we’re seeing!”

Chief Proulx said there have also been several “home invasions” where homes were illegally entered with the residents still inside.

“The types of crime we have been seeing is nothing like anything I have seen in my 29 years in the department!”

“It’s taxing my four or five available officers. We’re four and five weeks behind in our work. It’s utterly ridiculous the amount of work we’re behind in right now!”

Mayor Maroun reflected a bit that evening on the department’s chronic shortage of officers, which forced the village board this past summer to move the police department to a one 12-hour shift per day arrangement.

“Just so people know, we continue to search for new police officers. There are no officers thinking about transferring in or candidates thinking about applying for jobs here.”

“We are trying and we will continue to try!” he asserted.

Volleyball girls win big on Senior Recognition Night

Dan McClelland

by Dan Brown, Athletic Director

The Tupper Lake Varsity Volleyball team ended its regular season with a victory last Wednesday against Brushton-Moira. The visiting Panthers had fallen victim to the Lady Lumberjacks earlier in the season and the ‘Jacks were looking for a repeat victory.

In addition to being the final game of the regular season, the Lady Jacks were also facing off in their Senior Recognition game. With a family packed gym, and a student section dressed in their Hawaiian themed garb for Luau Night, the Sawmill was loud from the start. The Lady Jacks jumped out to a quick 5-1 lead before a couple of rotation errors slowed the match down. Nonetheless, the Tupper Lake Student-Section kept their “D-Fence” and “T-U-P-P-E-R” chants going to rally the girls. Despite a slow moving first set, the girls responded to and recovered from the loss in momentum. Ultimately, the girls went on to win a close first set 25-22.

In the second set, the ‘Jacks again came out strong and quickly went up 4-1 on the Panthers. However, as the set progressed, the Lady Jacks stumbled as the Panthers looked to stage a comeback. The ‘Jacks’ rotation again caused the floor confusion, but the girls kept their heads high. Midway through the set, the score came within two, but from there, the Panthers rallied to take the second set 25-21.

As the third set began, strong play from Seniors Libero, Hailey Conlon and Senior Outside Hitter Mya Gerstenberger paid off. The ‘Jacks were now settling in and taking command of the match. Gerstenberger closed out the set with strong serves as the boys and girls posing as Hawaiians cheered her on. With every serve, the smiles in the gym got bigger before the Lady Jacks cut down the Panthers to end set three 25-17 .

In the fourth and final set, the Lady Jacks played with more confidence as Sophomore and Right-Side Hitter Kendall Kenniston led the charge with a strong service game and several strategic taps from the front row. In all, the Lady Lumberjacks closed out Wednesday by winning the fourth set 25-17 to setup Saturday’s home playoff game versus none other than the Panthers of Brushton-Moira.

The winner of Saturday’s playoff game faced off last night (Tuesday, November 1) versus number one seed, Chateaugay.

Three places for kids to celebrate Halloween

Dan McClelland

There are plenty of opportunities for children here to enjoy Halloween here Monday.

The Town Recreation Department, in its first time taking over the chamber’s Trick or Treat on Park Street, will host the event Monday from 3p.m. to 5p.m. in the uptown business district. In past years hundreds of youngsters, all costumed up for the scary season, and their parents have called on local businesses there and the business owners have responded generously.

Laura LaBarge and her staff at the town will also host a Trunk or Treat at the municipal park from 3p.m. to 6p.m. where local residents will open their trunks and share the sweet bounty with local kids.

Mercy Living Center will also host a Trunk or Treat outside its facility from 3p.m. to 5p.m. The event replaces Mercy’s annual haunted house inside, as a pandemic precaution to keep all residents well.

Door to door canvassing in Tupper Lake neighborhoods Monday evening will also be a way for local kids to fill their bags with candy. That activity has diminished substantially in recent years with the arrival of the organized afternoon events.

Kiwanis Castle of Toys gearing up again for holiday giveaway

Dan McClelland

It’s that time again that the Tupper Lake Kiwanis Club and its supporters swing into high gear planning their Christmas distribution of toys to local children.

The Kiwanis Castle of Toys, a program that goes back generations here to the days of Dan and Issy Cassell when the family and its many friends ran the program, always needs support during the holiday season. Donations are welcome not just at Christmas, but throughout the year.

Families interested in applying must live within the Tupper Lake Central School District, and the children must reside with their parents/guardians. Applications can be picked up at the Ivy Terrace Office or Food Pantry. Applications can be mailed to Kiwanis Club of Tupper Lake, PO Box 1023. All applications should be returned as soon as possible. Pick-up and delivery will be held on Saturday, December 17 from 9 am to 11 am at the VFW.

Those wishing to make toy donations can drop toys off at the Adirondack Regional Federal Credit Union or contact Juli Dukett at 518-524-6220. Monetary donations are also most welcome.

Hundreds come out to welcome Sunday’s train at milestone event here

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

The Adirondack Railroad train rolled into town right on time Sunday at 1p.m., after blowing its telltale whistle several times as it crossed Underwood Bridge and approached the station.

There were reportedly 230 passengers aboard who had paid the price of a ticket for the ride which started at the Utica station that morning at 8:30a.m. There were nearly 200 people to welcome what the railroad officials called the first “revenue-train” into Tupper Lake since the 1980 Winter Olympics.

In the photo above some of the passengers hang out the window as the train pulls into our station and in the photo below by Jim Lanthier some of the crowd welcomes the arriving passengers.

The special event for both the Utica and Tupper Lake communities was also a milestone for the volunteers and staff of the Adirondack Railroad, who were in good numbers on the ride, and who have worked diligently for the past 30 years to make Sunday’s event happen.

Included among the passengers were members of the Central New York and Mohawk Valley chapters of the National Historic Railroad Society who chartered the last run on September 25, 1965, before the New York Central Railroad officially abandoned the line.

As part of the welcome reception, the Regional Office Of Sustainable Tourism, under the stewardship of Michelle Clement, did a great job pulling a fitting Tupper Lake welcome together with a new event here called the “Junction Function,” in just a few short weeks.

A complete story of the event with photographs and including interviews with some of the passengers will be carried in our issue next week.

“Junction Function” planned Sunday to celebrate Downtown Tupper Lake

Dan McClelland

Downtown Tupper Lake will be hosting a community celebration, dubbed the “Junction Function,” at the Tupper Lake Train Station on Sunday, October 16 from 1p.m. to 3 p.m. The free community event features local businesses, vendors, attractions, live music and artists.

“Junction Function” has been organized by the community of Tupper Lake, in partnership with the Regional Office of Sustainable Tourism (ROOST), to showcase Tupper Lake’s downtown area, businesses and local attractions. The event also coincides with the arrival of the first passenger train at the Tupper Lake Train Station in more than 40 years.

Community members and visitors are invited to the free event where they can welcome the train to Tupper Lake, take part in the festivities, learn more about upcoming regional events and area attractions and learn more about development plans for downtown Tupper Lake.

Among the many organizations participating in Junction Function include The Wild Center, Adirondack Sky Center and Observatory, ROOST, and Adirondack Rail Trail Association (ARTA). 2023 Lake Placid FISU World University Games representatives will also take part in the event and Tupper Arts will present a pop-up Art Show featuring works from the recent Tupper Lake Plein Air Festival. The event will feature live music by Josh Weise; and our local craft brewery, Raquette River Brewing, will be offering tastings.

Adirondack Mac, the Lake Placid 2023 FISU World University Games mascot and Ollie, The Wild Center otter mascot, will be on-hand to welcome attendees. Games, prizes and giveaways will round out the family-friendly event.

One highlight of the event will be the arrival of the first passenger train since 1981. Adirondack Railroad is making its inaugural journey along a scenic route through the Adirondacks from Utica to Tupper Lake. The 11-hour round-trip includes a one-and-a-half-hour stop in Tupper Lake beginning around 1:30 p.m. As passengers disembark they will be met with the local celebration where they can become acquainted with the community and its attractions, meet business and elected leaders, learn about future developments, and visit downtown businesses.

ROOST has created a map of the downtown Tupper Lake so that train passengers and visitors to the community can explore the area during their visit. The map indicates local businesses and restaurants that are a short walk from the train station. Some of the downtown businesses have adjusted their hours of operation to coincide with the event and visitors and local residents are encouraged to visit the downtown area before and after the festival.

Community members and those who travel to Tupper Lake for the event will also have the opportunity to board and explore the train while it is at the station.

According to Regional Office of Sustainable Tourism’s Tupper Lake Regional Manager, Katie Lalonde, “Junction Function “is an opportunity for the community of Tupper Lake to celebrate all that the village has to offer, along with sharing information about its ongoing revitalization. “Between the village’s recent submission of a NY Forward Grant for the downtown area, the revival of train service, construction of the highly anticipated Adirondack Rail Trail, coupled with the area’s thriving businesses, attractions and events, Tupper Lake is truly at the junction of a really exciting time.”

In September, the village applied to the NY Forward program to gain support for 18 transformative projects in its downtown area, positioning it as a vibrant connector of community and business at the junction of the Adirondack Rail Trail and the scenic rail line. NY Forward was established to support and encourage revitalization of small and rural communities, especially villages, hamlets and other small, neighborhood-scale municipal centers.

Tickets are still available for the Adirondack Railroad’s High Peaks Limited inaugural journey. Those interested should visit Adirondack Railroad for information and pricing. Regular trips from Utica to Tupper Lake will begin in 2023. Businesses and organizations that wish to take part in the Junction Function event should visit the Tupper Lake website to sign up.

Meeting and greeting new teachers

Dan McClelland

As has become something of a tradition the Tupper Lake Board of Education at its October meeting last week took some time before the meeting started to meet some of the new members of the faculty. From left were Lauren Connell, middle high school earth science teacher, Sherry Dubis, first grade teacher, Superintendent Russ Bartlett, Skylar Perrault, teaching assistant, Board President Jane Whitmore, Kelsey Moore, special education teacher, Cindy Williams, speech language pathologist, Syrena Haen, first grade teacher, Odessa Hoyt, middle high school math teacher, Jonathan Doane, math teacher at the middle high school and special education teacher Trevor Sussey. Light refreshments were served. (Dan McClelland photo)

Vintage sleds were show pieces again at park Saturday

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

For lovers of old snowmobiles there wasn’t a better place to be Saturday than the Tupper Lake Municipal Park when the Tupper Lake Snowmobile Club again hosted its Vintage Show and Swap Meet.

The main organizers again were club mainstays Kelly and Reese Fleury.

Working the reception table Saturday morning Mrs. Fleury said that about 55 sleds had already been registered and more were expected to arrive later in the morning.

This was the fourth year the club has staged the autumn show.

“Our best year was 2019 when there were over 60 sleds” exhibited by the North Country restorers and owners of the early snowmobiles. She said the club skipped the event in 2020 during the first year of the pandemic.

Reese and Kelly figured their turn-out this year would have been even better, had their date not conflicted with a larger snowmobile show in Syracuse that same weekend.

The show offers competitions and prizes in a number of classes: modified, restored, unrestored, trail, race, etc. “Unrestored” means nothing has been done to them- all of them are original, event the paint jobs.

Matt Braman of Bolton Landing brought along his two turquoise Scorpions- both 1965 models, along with a yellow 1961, now equipped with a diesel engine, which he added. All three were single-cylinder sleds.

Matt was comparing notes that morning with Kelly and Reese’s son, Andrew, who brought one of his older sleds to exhibit. His dad, always the avid collector, probably entered a half dozen of his- most of them between 1964 and 1970. One of Reese’s sleds on display was a single-ski, twin track 1964 Ski-doo, his oldest sled. He said this week he’s done some modifications to it.

Matt showed on his cell phone a photograph of a page in the Sears catalog in 1965 which showed Scorpions for sale for $699. His two turquoise sleds was the color of some of the Sears appliances in the 1960s and 1970s.

Scorpions, also sold by J.C. Penney, were made in Minnesota right into the 1970s, he noted.

He said he has a number of John Deere and other older makes at home. Among them is a 1959 or 1960 David Bradley, an ice sled also sold by J.C. Penney.

His small Scorpions were considered two-seaters, even though the seats measured little more than 30 inches long.

In those early sleds, the seat cushion was most of the suspension.

Frank Matthie of South Colton re-decked his trailer in plywood and installed a new axle to bring his sleds to the show.

“I had more to bring but I didn’t have room,” the collector told us. Frank that day brought his 1979 Yamaha Exciter 440, which is all original. He also owns a 1978 Yamaha, which is also original. He did bring on his double trailer his 1972 Yamaha 340- also in original condition. One he bought in Watertown and the other in Ohio. He brought along the bill of sale for one.

It was an invoice for the 1979 Yamaha showing a purchase price of $2,200. After the allowance for a trade-in for an older Exciter 440 of $800, the balance was $1,400.

How long have you been collecting? we asked him.

“Too long,” Frank said with a big smile.

Chris Potter and his son, Dakota, also from South Colton, brought several sleds including a 1977 Skidoo RV, which they entered in the trail muscle class. According to Dakota, “his daddy built that sled from scratch” four or five years ago. Said Chris, “it was basically a pile of parts when I got it.”

They also brought a 1972 Skidoo TNT Free Air, which was originally white.

Chris said he has been building and restoring sleds for the past ten years. Dakota has helped on some recent rebuilds.

At home he has 11 more vintage sleds and six newer ones.

We asked him how Mrs. Potter likes all the sleds around their house and he said she’s okay with the current number, but that may change if he buys any more.

Dakota was still very excited by an event earlier that day on their way to the local show.

As they were heading down Route 56, about a mile north of Sevey’s Corners. Chris spotted a female moose standing near the guard rails. After a moment or two a bull moose emerged from the forest and both crossed in front of them.

“This was the best Saturday, ever!” exclaimed Dakota.

Howard Newberry from Silver Creek, N.Y., south of Buffalo, brought along several sleds which included a 1981 Skidoo Citation 4500 which was unrestored. He also brought a 1973 Raider 44T and a 1972 LVI Raider 400, both original and both with two-cylinder engines in the rear and both twin-tracked. The Raiders were made by Leisure Vehicles Industries of Detroit, Michigan, which only made them from 1971 to 1975.

Howard owns about 15 of them and he says he rides them all still today. The Citation is registered in New York State and the Raiders he only rides on vintage sled events and they have registrations for that, he noted. He has about 30 sleds in all.

He opened up the hoods in the back to show off the engines there.

Howard came with his buddy, Bob Hartloff of Forestville, N.Y. and he brought with him several sleds including a 1969 Polaris Mustang 303 and a 1966 that had been restored which is how he bought them. He also brought his pride and joy- a 1964 Polaris Snotraveler antique sled, which was unrestored.

Bob’s girl friend Sherry Nelson of nearby Bemus Point, N.Y. came with the two men bringing her 1966 Polaris Mustang 247. It was entered in the “antique restored- pre 1967” class.

Bob’s Snotraveler featured brake and throttle levers side by side in front of the seat and a tricycle-style steering unit without padding. The forward and reverse gears were controlled by sticks mounted on the engine. Bouncing up and down on one of the running boards, he showed it had its own suspension. There was no cover on the rear engine, and it came that way.

Howard said the first snowmobiles in the world were made by Polaris in about 1952 and were similar in design to Bob’s Snotraveler.

Bob’s very proud of that winter ride and he fired it up to show us how well it works. It was an easy pull. He said he rides it regularly.

Bob and his family ran a Polaris dealership, Hartloff Polaris in Forestville between 1993 to 2001. He said his dad purchased the Snotraveler used from an original owner in their community. Bob recalls it took a case of beer and a lot of sweet talk to convince the man to sell it to him.

The purchase price for the used sled in the late 1990s was still $1,500.

“My dad really wanted it because he wanted to put it in our showroom. So he kept trying to buy it and the guy wouldn’t sell. “One day he told me to give him some cash out of the till and told me he needed another $40 for some beer. Three hours later he came back three sheets to the wind and told me we have to go pick up that sled. He said he had to drink a number of beer with the owner to finally convince him to sell it to him.

The sled originally came with a windshield and Bob said he could add it back, and still have it remain in the unrestored classification.

The Hartloff family’s dealership was a jumping off point every evening about 9p.m. every winter when snowmobilers would gather there for a ride which often lasted the entire night.

Bob and Howard noted how the older sleds worked better in the cold and dry night air, and you could see very clearly most cold nights. “These old sleds love the cold,” Howard noted.

The two friends admitted there is some value in keeping sleds unrestored, when it comes to showing them off. There are also show rewards for the people who undertake major restorations like Chris Potter did.

Bob said whenever he brings his Snotraveler to a show, he washes it all down first in WD-40, to clean up the original paint. Regular applications also keeps rust at bay.

He also said he rides most of his old sleds, and now with the modern gases and oil they are more dependable now than they once were. Those sleds will go between 15 and 25 miles per hour, top end.

Bob owns close to 50 old sleds, most of them Polaris, of course.

Bob, Howard and Sherry all drove more than 300 miles to attend the show.

David Newton of Potsdam brought two unusual sleds to the show. One was a Hus-ski, that was made only three years- 1963, 1964 and 1965. They were made in La Chute, Quebec.

Originally made with a very wide single track, they had so much trouble with them the company sent out kits to have the owners install twin tracks, Mr. Newton explained.

He said the company later sold out to Bolens (Food Manufacturing Company) of Wisconsin and it made Bolens sleds for three more years. Mr. Newton owns one of them which he displayed Saturday and which he bought new.

Those two types of sleds feature a unique style where the motor and tracks are in a front cab affair and the rider sits on a sled that it pulls.

The Bolens sleds were also twin-tracked.

Mr. Newton brought to the show a display board with photographs the piles of parts from which he rebuilt the Hus-ski sled into the condition it is today.

“I was living in Florida at the time and I called my son and told him I wanted that sled. He told me: ‘really, Dad...it’s a pile of junk’!”

“We did all the restoration work ourselves.”

Mr. Newton remembers that in the 1960s there were probably 50 different companies that made snowmobiles.

In his career David was a machine repair machinist at the General Motors plant in Massena for 32 years. “So tinkering with old sleds comes natural to me,” he laughed. He stays busy these days as he is in the process of restoring a third sled.

Bill Blunden of Carthage, N.Y. brought another unusual snowmobile to the show. It was a 1963 Bonham Spartan that he entered in the “antique/restored” class. The company was located in Provo, Utah and they only made that sled for one year. Bill also owns a 1964 Polaris Comet and a 1965 Foxcraft, which he left a home.

His Spartan came equipped with lawnmower-sized wheels which replace the skis so he can ride it summers on his lawn. “It’s very good at tearing up your lawn and annoying your wife,” he joked.

Bill just started collecting antique snowmobiles a few years ago. Before that he devoted his spare time to restoring antique fire trucks.

He said this is the second time he’s attended this show and the organizers do a great job running it.

Lots of homecoming hoopla in lower parking lot during tailgate party

Dan McClelland

Before Friday’s Homecoming game on the Rotary Track and Field, the lower parking lot of the L.P. Quinn Elementary School was jammed with kids in school colors- laughing, eating, tossing balls, cheering, at a tailgate party in a fashion that would bolster any school team.

Lively tunes rolled out from the school across the parking lot, beginning at 5p.m.

Some of the varsity soccer girls in tenth and eleventh grade were all decked out in school colors, wearing team jerseys and some with face paint.

From left in the photo of the girls were Campbell Casagrain, Elli Dukett, Sadie Safford, Emily Bissonette, who came to cheer on the varsity jacks despite the crutches, Taylor Stoll and Sadie Tower.

Sundy Sorenson and Melissa Savage were the volunteers who spent their after-class time Friday popping delicious and well-buttered popcorn for the school sports fans.

The hot dog line stayed busy, under the watchful eye of Superintendent Russ Bartlett.

Elementary School Principal Elizabeth Littlefield came out in the parking lot to cheer, and brought along husband Owen and daughters Eloise and Genevieve.

Jim Ellis honored for decades of work to bring passenger service back to region

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

Adirondack Railroad President Frank Kobliski saved perhaps the most moving part of his speech Tuesday to the last- and that was the honoring of Tupper Lake Jim Ellis for his decades of advocation for the return of the train to Tupper Lake.

Calling Mr. Ellis back to the speaker’s desk after he and Paul Maroun had welcomed the guests earlier, the railroad CEO told the audience in the train station that “Jim has served on the Adirondack Railroad Preservation Board for years and he’s been a stalwart and dynamic force in bringing about what we celebrate today.”

“Jim, in recognition of your hard work and achievement I have from our board our first ever lifetime achievement award.”

He read the words on the framed proclamation:

“Whereas James Ellis, lifelong resident and favorite son of the Village of Tupper Lake, New York has dedicated more than 48 years of his life to bringing passenger rail service back to the Adirondacks- 30 of it as a director of the Adirondack Railroad Preservation Society and the operating Adirondack Railroad;

“And whereas, by his efforts and collaborations, and the support of his wife, Elaine, daughter Jamell Ellis Branch and son, John, the return of passenger rail to his home community is celebrated today, September 13, 2022;

“Be it known to all that the directors of the society bestowed the first lifetime achievement amount to James Ellis with grateful thanks and recognition of his inspiring example!”

Very loud applause.

Jim was joined in front of the audience by his family members.

The presentation was made behind a handcrafted ticket counter crafted by accomplished wood worker Jim Meade and donated to the station in memory of his mother Barbara Meade years ago, shortly after the station was finished.

Mr. Ellis, who is currently the chairman of the Franklin County Industrial Development Agency, never misses a chance to plug one of his pet projects. He took that public opportunity to explain that IDA, in preparation for the downtown revitalization initiative (DRI) grant for the next cycle is taking information today.

He pointed to the IDA staffer and the information table nearby, and said the IDA and community leaders want to know from the people of Tupper Lake and from its many visitors “what you want to see here in the Junction.”

The new grant application, he said, will cover a target area from the town’s Aaron Maddox Center to the western limits of the village.

“So let us know what you think,” he told the 100 or so in the audience that day.

Village seeking public input on “The Junction Connects” NY Forward application projects

Dan McClelland

The Village of Tupper Lake is developing “The Junction Connects,” a NY Forward funding request. The Junction is Tupper Lake’s historic Main Street “downtown” commercial district, home to anchor businesses, local retail, tourism centered businesses and attractions like Raquette River Brewing, and the train station/trail hub soon to be the connection point of the Adirondack Rail Trail and scenic rail to Thendara/Old Forge.

For the past few weeks businesses and property owners have been submitting proposed projects for the application. In order to submit a winning application, the Village needs to hear your thoughts on projects that have been proposed for inclusion in the application. To share your thoughts on the projects online, please visit the project website www.tupperlakejunction.com between September 14 and September 18, 2022.

Here is a sampling of the projects the community will propose to achieve Tupper Lake’s vision of connecting Junction businesses to the opportunities the rail trail offers, and visitors and residents to the Junction’s assets and amenities:

- Business expansion projects at Faust Cabins, The Enclave B&B, P2s Pub, Tupper Lake Supply, and Fleury's Automotive.

- Installation of green infrastructure; bicycle parking, charging and amenities; and access and site improvements at Raquette River Brewing.

- Mixed-use redevelopment of the former Maroun's Store and Pharmacy buildings on Main Street, with updated commercial space on the street level and housing above.

- Expanded accommodations offerings.

- Private sector site landscaping and green space enhancement at businesses throughout the target area, and

- Public sector streetscape enhancement to “connect the dots” including sidewalks, bike lanes, green space and plantings, wayfinding signage and public art, all linking the Train Station/Adirondack Rail Trail trailhead with the Junction's restaurants, shops, services, lodging and residences.

NY Forward is a new state program for downtown areas in hamlets and villages. Like the DRI, NY Forward applicants must submit a vision for the downtown and a slate of projects to achieve that vision. The Regional Economic Development Council (REDC) reviews the applications and nominates winners. NY Forward awards will be smaller, but more numerous, than the DRI. Rather than one $10 million award per region with the DRI, each Regional Economic Development Council can award up to three awards per region—either two $4.5 million awards, or one $4.5 million award and two $2.25 million awards. More information about the NY Forward program is available at https://www.ny.gov/programs/ny-forward.

The Department of State (DOS) and its agency partners then engage the winning communities in a strategic planning process with assistance from a consultant to develop a slate of readily implementable projects.

If you have questions about Tupper Lake’s NY Forward application, please visit the project website at or email Melissa McManus at tupperlakecommunitydevelopment@gmail.com.

Riding in style

Dan McClelland

On yesterday’s Adirondack Railroad Preservation Society train into Tupper Lake riders who boarded at the Thendara Depot near Old Forge had the opportunity to enjoy riding in several specialty cars including this two-story domed car. Hundreds of people here turned out to the Junction Depot to celebrate the return of passenger train service to Tupper Lake. The first train since the 1980 Winter Olympics carried over 150 invited guests. Full coverage of the historic event will be carried in our issue next week. (Dan McClelland photo)

Adirondack Railroad train arriving Tuesday

Dan McClelland

by Bob Hest

Many in the Tupper Lake community over the years believed their town deserved passenger rail services again and to encourage that the town board, headed at the time by Supervisor Dean Lefebvre, created a committee about 2004 that in the ensuing years built a new station in the Junction, a historic replica of Tupper’s first station that was razed on that site a century ago. The aim was that if Tupper Lake as a community could build a train station, it would show the world, and state officials in particular, that it wanted to see trains return to town.

Passenger service disappeared here in 1965 and the corridor remained absent of train traffic from that point on with the exception of a brief operation for the 1980s Winter Olympics.

The town committee called “Next Stop! Tupper Lake,” chaired by Dan McClelland, raised over $300,000 in hundreds of donations from railroad supporters here and built the station in 2006 and 2007 with the help of dozens of volunteers, and a contracting crew headed by Darryl Robideau. Many local businesses gave generously to help the station get built. A long-time summer resident at Big Wolf was a key benefactor of the train station project.

Lots of volunteers and staff at the Remsen-based Adirondack Railroad Preservation Society (ARPS) also believed trains could eventually return here, committing thousands of hours of time and energy in the fledgling train operation in the south end of the Adirondack Railroad corridor during the past 30 years.

Rail service to Tupper Lake from points south on the track and excursions out of Tupper Lake are expected to commence on a regular basis, ARPS officials have said this summer.

The dream of many in the community is coming true next Tuesday when the non-profit railroad company has planned ceremonies to celebrate this historic milestone. A train with more than 100 invited passengers aboard is expected to arrive around 1p.m. having started the journey from the Thendara Depot near Old Forge. Community residents wishing to be a part should plan to arrive at the Junction depot no later than 12:45 to see the train arrive.

Parking near the depot is limited. Emergency vehicles only will be parking on the Depot property. Handicapped persons may wish to park behind the Lumberjack Restaurant. Arrangements have also been made to use the large parking area near the playground on Washington Street. It is a short walk from there to the station and a shuttle service is being organized.

The ceremonies will feature tributes, remarks by state and local elected officials, and a ribbon cutting. Regional news media have been invited. Local photographer and train enthusiast Jim Lanthier will be taking pictures for the historical record. Locals may wish to walk through the train which will include a glass- topped dome car, a dining car that once was in service to Tupper Lake when operated by the New York Central railroad, and first class cars that offer passengers an enjoyable and memorable experience. A ribbon cutting ceremony and photo opportunity is planned around 3p.m. in front of the newest locomotive acquired by the railroad, before the train departs to return to Thendara.

Railroad company officials have said numerous times this year that they look forward to being good community partners in the years ahead.

-Bob Hest is the corporate secretary of the Adirondack Railroad Preservation Society and board member who resides near Malone. He has been working diligently in recent years with fellow ARPS board members Jim Ellis and Al Dunham along with the Next Stop! Tupper Lake group, to bring about this event.

Board members show off new logo at new place

Dan McClelland

Some of the members of the board of the Tupper Lake History Museum show the group’s new logo banner Monday during the board’s first official visit to their new headquarters. The logo, sketched by one of the museum board members Marlene Hyde, was professionally improved enlarged onto a banner by Faith and Andrew McClelland at Spruce and Hemlock and Stacked Graphics. The Tupper Lake History Museum’s new logo carries its new motto: “Rooted in our past, focused on our future!” under its name with the words encircling a tree with branches and roots. From left are some of the museum’s board members in town on Labor Day: Stuart Amell, Jim Lanthier, Laurie Amell, Mary Richer, Kathleen Lefebvre, Patty Reandeau, Marlene Hyde, Joe Kimpflen, Dian Conor, Jeanette Keniston and Dan McClelland. (Photo by Paul Lefebvre).

History Museum has new home

Dan McClelland

by Joseph Kimpflen

After 20 years as a nomad, the Tupper Lake History Museum now has a home to call its own. Following a lengthy search process, museum leaders last week closed on the purchase of a property on upper Park Street. Known to longtime Tupper Lakers as the Sarvis Building, the one-time garage was most recently the home of a Tex-Mex restaurant and a haircutting business. It has been vacant for the past year.

While the new property will require significant work to make it ready to host visitors, museum board members are enthusiastic about its potential.

In Vice President Dian Connor’s words, “Now we can look forward to creating a welcoming place for people to visit us and room for us to display our exhibits, and also room to grow.”

Strategically located on the eastern entrance to the village, it is also expected to be a new welcome center, staffed by knowledgeable museum volunteers.

Among the features that attracted the museum board’s interest to the property were: its location, clearly visible on a main route into town; the building’s fundamentally sound physical condition; ample parking; and a good amount of potentially usable exhibit space for the price. Board members had looked carefully at other options, especially in the Junction neighborhoods, where the museum has been housed in recent years, but found nothing comparable available.

The purchase ends a challenging period in the museum’s long history. In 2018, the museum leaders had to move out of the old Junction firehouse, its home for a number of years, due to structural problems and the town board’s decision to sell the property.

Invited by Next Stop Tupper Lake! to occupy the rebuilt but partially empty train station, the museum and its volunteers enjoyed their most successful three years ever there, hosting hundreds of residents and visitors, despite COVID-related challenges. In January of this year, however, the museum had to move again, to make way for the return of passenger trains and the new rail bikes to the station. The rail bike operation opened earlier this month and trains are expected next summer.

Since the January move the museum’s large collection of artifacts, photos, documents and display cases have been in storage, while the board of trustees, led by President Kathleen Lefebvre, focused on locating a permanent home and raising money for a down payment. Despite its homeless state, the museum volunteers were able to contribute artifacts to this summer’s highly successful Tupper Arts exhibit on logging, orchestrated by museum board member Jim Lanthier.

The recent purchase was made possible by a successful fundraising campaign, the progress of which since the beginning of 2022 was reported in these pages.

Board President Kathleen Lefebvre said “the outpouring of support for our capital campaign was overwhelming. We received many gifts from residents as well as from many visitors who had strong ties to Tupper Lake. Many of those gifts came with notes of support and encouragement to continue our efforts. One in particular said they left Tupper Lake in 1951 “but Tupper Lake never left them.”

Mrs. Lefebvre also expressed her board’s appreciation to the Next Stop! Tupper Lake group for its generous loan of the train station quarters to house the museum these past three years when the museum saw very high visitation numbers, despite the pandemic.

A major kick-off to the campaign was a $12,000 gift from Next Stop! Tupper Lake, and Mrs. Lefebvre expressed her appreciation for that as well.

As Mrs. Connor put it, “We are extremely thankful for all the monetary donations we have received that will help us in our endeavors.” The campaign, to which local residents responded generously, got a second big boost in April, when Art Richer Jr., son of the Museum’s founder, jump-started the effort with a matching pledge. The museum has also benefited from grants from the Aseel Fund and the Adirondack Foundation.

Museum officials are aware that more fundraising work lies ahead, with an initial focus on paying off the mortgage on the new property as quickly as possible. Board members are currently selling tickets for a 50/50 drawing to be held this weekend, and other fundraising projects are in the planning stage. The museum organization last year gained status as a 501(c)3 not-for-profit, tax-exempt entity, making all contributions tax deductible.

As of this writing, the museum board was laying plans for what will be a busy fall and winter season. The all-volunteer workforce will be painting, weeding, rearranging the interior, and ultimately bringing in the museum’s exhibits to create displays. With lots of creative work to be done, the museum welcomes new volunteers as it begins this new phase of its life; anyone interested in getting involved should contact a board member, visit the Museum Facebook page, send an email (TLHistoryMuseum@gmail.com), or call Vice President Dian Connor at 518-359-2126.

-Joe Kimpflen is the secretary of the History Museum’s Board of Trustees.

Mountain Challenge set for this weekend

Dan McClelland

The Tupper Lake Archers 29th Annual Mountain Challenge is this Saturday and Sunday, August 27 and 28. Testing the skills of local archers and visiting archers from around the northeast will be two courses of 30 targets. Featured too will various novelty shoots, door prizes and raffles. Registration at the Tupper Lake Rod and Gun Club starts at 8a.m. each day.

Sculptor of wood exhibiting unique pieces at Tupper Arts

Dan McClelland

by Dan McClelland

Tyler Schrader from Johnstown, N.Y. fashions puzzle-type pieces of many kinds of wood into magnificent pieces of one-of-a-kind wooden sculptures. And many of them are on display this week at Tupper Arts on Park Street. His show runs through September 10.

Many of the 27 year old’s family including his mother Kaye, his grandmother and his father came up for the opening reception of his exhibit Wednesday. A number of local folks stopped by the evening for the preview of his incredible work.

Tyler’s brother Brett came up with him earlier last week to help him set up the show. Brett makes intricate home-make jewelry out of metal and some of his pieces are on display too.

Most dramatic of his pieces, a photo of with the young artist was carried on last week’s front page, is an eight foot high giant circle of rings called “A Cosmic Portal.” Embedded behind the hand-carved rings are thousands of LED lights of many colors. The piece was created for a music festival called “The Electric Forest” in Michigan in recent years.

It’s actually a double-side piece, but he only brought the front to the Tupper show.

“I kind of play off the idea of creating illusions with light and repetitions of cuts in the wood,” he said of many of his creations, including the Cosmic Portal. “It creates a sense of beauty using light with each!”

“Many people find them mesmerizing!” We certainly did.

He started working in wood and other art forms about eight years ago- honing his skills, developing unique techniques as he went.

Also on display at Tupper Arts this summer are the unusual sculptures of prominent Adirondack artist Barney Bellinger, who uses all sorts of materials in his pieces. Many of his sculptures are very abstract and incredibly inventive.

“I love Barney’s stuff,” Tyler told the Free Press last week. “He and I are pretty good friends!”

Although Tyler’s touring has been somewhat limited to date, he does have some of his pieces in a Miami show right now.

In the preparation of his wooden pieces he says he uses a lot of Adirondack species- walnut, ash and oak. He said walnut is probably his favorite, given its very pronounced grains.

Tyler attended SUNY Purchase where he studied painting and drawing. One of his abstract paintings- done in very pronounced shades of green and gray- is a part of his show here.

“I wanted to paint with wood because I love wooden materials- the smells, the touch.”

He typically creates curved and circular wooden pieces and then joins and glues them together. A wooden jig saw puzzle emerges as one piece after another is created and fit exactly into place by the artist. He says the progression of what piece is next, how it’s shaped and how it exactly fits the one before comes from his mind. There is no sketch or pattern to follow.

There’s plenty of routing and dremel work and band sand crafting.

“It’s all intuitive...nothing is drawn out beforehand.”

On several pieces he showed where he started with a piece in the center and then worked out from there.

In recent months he’s been using unique pieces of wood, polishing them brightly and then installing LED lights behind them which shine though cracks or intentional channels, or through a glass face.

They are all quite impressive.

He’s been developing what he calls “light concepts” and some of his pieces are illuminated with the switch of hand-held controls, like a TV’s remote control. He also equips some with blue tooth technology.

Some of his pieces can produce thousands of different patterns in light.

When the room is darkened, the wood on his pieces disappears but the lights come alive in unending different patterns.

The lights on some of his pieces are powered by conventional AC cords and plugs.

After this show, the artist is returning to Michigan with his Cosmic Portal, where he’ll be attending an international show called “Archives.” It will be on display in a park in Grand Rapids, Michigan for three weeks in late September and early October.

Would he sell it? “Absolutely,” joking that artists have to eat too.

He said he hopes the piece might bring as much as $25,000.

“We only had a month to build the Cosmic Portal,” in what he called “a very constrained time frame” before the music festival.

“It called for 16 hour days non-stop!”

He had created several smaller prototypes of his piece as first steps.

He used those in a video he created to submit to the festival organizers for their acceptance of his piece. “They loved the idea” and asked me to build it.

Tyler’s mother, Kaye, saw his talent when he was in the early years of high school. “He had a wonderful art teacher in high school who really influenced him. She was a wonderful woman who really encouraged him and it took off for him.”

She said when he started working with Adirondack woods, he “looked at a lot of books, read a lot of things and started, putting his own twist on things.”

Tyler’s father was “a junk collector,” according to Kaye. In his backyard was a huge collection of all sorts of stuff.

From those materials came some of the mountings in his show here. One, for example, was a semi-transparent plastic drum, where Tyler installed lights inside. Another of his mounting devices to show off a particular wooden piece was a large paper roll he coated in a plaster material.

She said she was very proud of her son and all the amazing things he has created. “It all just comes out of his head. It’s truly a gift!”