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Her nickname was 2 P. I remember her when she was just
a squirt of a girl growing up in Moody, brown as a beech nut husk from
constantly being out of doors. She was like a fish in the water and despite
being the youngest she was clearly the best swimmer among the Moody summer
colony kids who frequented the beach next to her house.
2 P wrote to this column recently, a mention of steamboats in a previous
column having sparked some strong memories of her youthful days growing up
on the lake. Her letter was signed 2 P, which sparked some memories of my
own. (I was one of the kids who often swam on that stretch of beach
alongside her house.) A glance at the return address disclosed that 2 P is
now Mrs. Adele Molinski, living in Hudson, New York. Her letter follows:
Last week you ran the article about the steam yachts in early traffic on
T.L., and under the photo — it stated “somewhere is the steam yacht
‘Altamont,’” and memories came flooding back when I used to go to Ketcham’s
camp (across from our old house) where Daddy Ken Lamoy was caretaker. We
used to go over on weekends and help get ready for the summer. On these
occasions I did a lot of walking in the woods, fishing, etc. Looking at the
shore from Moody Rd. — the second bay over from Mrs. K’s — to the left I
found the remains of this huge boat and was so excited I took photos —
enclosed copies for you. You’d think I found the “Titanic!”This was about
spring of ‘51. I don’t know if the remains are still there. Thought this
might be of interest to you.
Tupper will always be my “heart.” I’ll never leave my love memories of Moody
esp.!
2 P
Note: The Ketcham camp referred to in 2 P’s letter was one of the earliest
camps on Tupper Lake. Mr. Ketcham, from Yonkers, was a highly successful
gentleman who through his generosity and outgoing personality was highly
regarded in this community. The Ketcham summer home was known as Camp
Ashanty, a large complex that included thirteen out buildings. Mr. Ketcham
accompanied Uncle Mart Moody to Washington when that famous guide accepted
President Grover Cleveland’s invitation to visit him at the White House.
Mrs. Ketcham was a girlhood friend of Mrs. Cleveland. (The president had
been enthralled by Uncle Mart, whom he had met while on a sporting visit to
this region during which time he stayed at Moody’s Camp Redside Hotel, later
the Waukesha cabins.)
It is said that Mr. Ketcham took great relish in telling how the old
woodsman charmed the president and his friends with his inimitable style of
telling his inexhaustible repertoire of “tall, tall stories.” After Mr.
Ketcham’s death, Mrs. Ketcham continued regularly to visit Camp Ashanty for
many, many years until 1964. The property is now owned by Robert Abplanalp,
successful inventor and businessman, close friend and frequent host to the
later former President Richard Nixon at the Tupper Lake camp, now known as
Adirondack Fisheries Inc. Mr. Abplanalp worked for many years with his
Swiss-born father in a tiny workshop before perfecting the aerosol device
that is so ubiquitous today on containers that hold everything from paint to
shaving cream. His firm is known worldwide as the Precision Valve Co. Mr.
Abplanalp is highly regarded by all who know him in this community as a
“regular guy, unassuming and considerate.”
It should also be noted that Ken Lamoy, mentioned in 2 P’s letter, was not
only a caretaker of the Ketcham Camp Ashanty, but also one of only four
postmasters following Mart Moody and his wife, “Aunt Minerva” of the Moody
P.O. established in 1884 by U.S. President Chester Arthur, a friend of Uncle
Mart. He not only named Mart as first postmaster, but also gave him the
honor of having the P.O. bear his name. Ken was appointed in 1929 and served
until 1954.
So what is the story behind 2 P’s “Titanic” discovery on one of her forest
ramblings? Any attempt to identify that great old boat, whose final voyage
ended in that tiny slip, the shoreline across from Watch Island becoming her
gravesite, would necessarily be highly speculative at this late date. There
are a few clues, however, and the readers can decide for themselves if such
clues permit a possible identification.
First, however, it is necessary to understand that in the early years of the
1900s and right up to the 1920s when roads and the vehicles to travel them
improved, boat transportation was essential, not only to get from one
location to another, but also essential in getting supplies to camps and
hotels on the various lakes. Equally important was the use of “steamers” to
move the huge rafts of logs held together by booms that required towing down
the lake to the “Sorting Gap,” where the lake’s outlet joined the Racquette
River. As a result of these needs, there were many large steamboats plying
Tupper Lake waters. Some were built locally by master boat builders like
Luther Owen, who had apprenticed under Rushton, the renowned Canton
craftsman. Others arrived via flat bed on the new M & M railroad from
talented builders in Lake George and the river towns along the St. Lawrence
River, where steamboats were common as early as the mid-1800s. In my files
are some notes written by Aurore Alexander that tell of some of her memories
during a lifetime spent in this community and includes a description of some
“of the beautiful boats that were so prominent on Tupper Lake.”
Note: Mrs. Alexander ne’e Henault and her husband, Percy, in 1910 took over
operation from Percy’s father, Jabez of the Waukesha Hotel, one of the first
resort hotels in the area and purchased in 1893 from Mart Moody, who had
named it Camp Redside after the brook running alongside. (Now Radimer,
Landry property.) The Alexanders built the original Waukesha Grill in 1932
before selling to the late Charles Girard. Several generations will no doubt
recall with great nostalgia the sweet sounds from the saxophone of the
incomparable Ray Bourdage as he played “Good Night Sweetheart” at that
famous grill’s closing time each Saturday night.
In her notes, Mrs. Alexander tells of not wanting to trust her own memory,
so she wrote to Hod Bellows, then retired in Florida. Mr. Bellows was one of
the lake’s premier boat men and a few of the boats (due to space
restrictions) that he described in his prompt reply to Aurore follow. Such a
list has important historical value. The number of boats, their types, and
where they were built can be regarded as reflections of the social and
economic systems within which they were constructed, utilized and discarded.
It can also satisfy a simple curiosity about the past and of things not
known or easily forgotten.
The Lillian T
This was a steamboat brought from Lake George by Pliny Robbins, beautifully
designed with a galley in back and pilot house in front. It carried up to
twenty passengers. Sold to Moynihan (lumberman) to tow logs from Bog River
Falls to Pages Bluff. When the Moynihans were finished here, it was drawn
out at the Prince Albert dock and dismantled.
The Ben Harrison
Built for John Hurd about 1891. Used to tow his logs down the lake.
Sixty-five feet in length of heavy timbers. This steamboat was designed with
shallow draft, a side wheeler, it had a snubbing post for towing. It was
built locally by a man named VonDell on ways set up between the tenement
building and the Owens home on lower Wawbeek Avenue.
The Fox Hall
The first gasoline launch on Tupper Lake. Built by Luther Owen for Hod
Bellows, licensed to carry thirty passengers. Hod would leave Tupper at 8
o’clock every morning, stopping at all the camps to deliver mail and
groceries as well as passengers.
The Uncle Mart, The Paradise Point, the Bridgebrook
All steamboats owned by Col. Barbour. Remember no bridge to cross Bog River
to Barbour’s until 1916. When the American Legion bought the Barbour
property, they changed the name of the Bridgebrook to Legionnaire. It was
used to take patients from the infirmary for rides, especially at sunset.
Capacity about thirty passengers.
The Harold P.
Closer to being a tug boat, owned by Moynihan to tow logs. Hod Bellows,
engineer. He had a pilot and three deck hands. When towing was finished, the
Harold P. was drawn out across the lake from Moody.
Was the “Harold P.” 2 P’s “Titanic?” In her letter, 2 P
enclosed several photos that may provide other clues. One shows a circular
hole toward the stern that could have held a snubbing post. Another photo
shows the boiler, so it was a steamboat. A third photo shows the planking in
side view that 2 P indicates ran eight feet from keel to top rail. The
planking is laid up in what boat builders call a carvel hull, each of the
planks being laid alongside the next one. This is a more economical method
than lapstrake or clinker-built hull in which each plank overlaps the one
below it like a clapboard house and would be the method of choice for a boat
with short-life specialized use like the “Harold P.” Such construction also
requires constant painting to keep the boat waterproof, which may account
for its good condition. After so many years, I’d like to think 2 P’s mystery
boat was the “Harold P.”
What is your opinion? |