Notes collected by Anne Willis

 

From Vern Pope:

 

Horseblock Point got its name because the carcasses of the horses that fell through the ice during the winter when ice was being cut for summer use ended up at "Horseblock Point".  The men would cut the ice in front of the town and haul it ashore and store it in icehouses.  They covered the ice with sawdust to keep it from melting.

 

Horseblock Point was the spot where cattle were herded to swim to Downie, Hickey and Stave.  They would tie the lead cow to a horse and lead the horse into the river at Horseblock Point.  The men would guide the horse from a rowboat and lead the herd across the water.  The cows would follow the lead cow.

  

Notes re: Downie Island 

 

In October 1985 Bruce Kelsey put in our septic system.  One of the machines he used was a small grader with a pushing blade on the front.  The motor broke down and a mechanic from Newell's Garage in Lansdowne came to fix it.  He had not been to Downie Island since early 1950's.  That year he was part of a gang of workers who were destructing the hotel.  He said they threw toilets out the window plus other things.  They had brought a dump truck out here (don't know how).  The truck got stuck in a mud hole east of the chimney and they had something else (a tractor maybe) trying to pull the truck out.  They both got stuck.  It was a mess - eventually they got the vehicles out of the mud.

 

History of Downie, (formerly Float Island)

 

Notes made by Jack Schottmiller August 23, 1983 from conversation with Karl and Betty Nelson, 48 Sachem Road, Weston, CT 06882

 

Karl and Betty Nelson were vacationing at the Glenn House, rented a canoe and paddled around Downie.  Jack and Anne Schottmiller were sitting on their dock and talked to them.  The Nelsons came ashore and Betty Nelson took a brick from the fireplace home to Connecticut with her.  She sent two pictures of Downie - one a panorama view of the hotel and one a view from the hotel to the Schottmiller’s that they had framed and hangs in their cottage.

 

From Betty Nelson:

 

At the turn of the century and before there was a boy’s school approximately at the back of Buggie/Schottmiller lot.  When the school closed the island was purchased by a Scotsman, Mr. MacFarlin, who converted it into the Float Island House.  People came from Baltimore and the east coast by train to Clayton, and Mr. MacFarlin picked up guests by boat the “Princess” and brought them to the dock on what is now Willis’ beach.  Baggage - steamer trunks were pulled up the hill by horse - on a vehicle on a trail.  College boys - very nice - unloaded and loaded baggage.  No electricity on island.  Water came from area in front of was Cleland’s and is now Hamlin’s.  A windmill brought the water up.  There were cows and goats on the island and they kept grass down.  The best view was from East Rock at eastern tip of island on what was Dixon’s and now MacPherson’s lot.  Rowley was called Crow Island.  Swimming was good at Sheep (Popham) Island.  Men Swam at one end and women at the other au natural.  People who owned Rich Island were from (Rosebrugh) Syracuse - Boesberry (?)  Young girls would go over there for tea.  They would have marshmallow roasts and make fudge at west end of island (where Cooks are now).  Front porch of hotel had best view on island - approximately the same as from Schottmiller’s cottage.  Betty’s aunt (Marjorie) bought Owens Island for $150.00 and later sold it to the Jordans (who went to a lot of cocktail parties).(Good for them!C.T.)

Mulcaster was used by rum runners during Prohibition.  One time they broke into main house and built a bonfire on the dining room table.

One time Betty’s little sister cried too much and Mr. MacFarlin, Owner of the Float Island House, made the little sister sleep in a tent outside with her mother.

The hotel sewage went out by Willis’on the east side if the peninsula, while swimming took place on the west side (Dowling’s) where there are sandy beaches .  Women wore bloomers when they went swimming.  There were many birch trees particularly at west end of the  island.  Women and children came up for two months but men came up for only two weeks.

From the hotel porch they could watch storms coming.  There were many loons.  One night they saw a shadow gliding over the water - it was a rum runner.  Girls would swim from Downie to Rich Island.  There were sandy beaches all along west side of peninsula (Dowling’s).  No other structures were on the island except the hotel and its buildings.

 


September 17, 1987

 

Betty Nelson’s sister, Peg Weikart and her husband Jack visited Toad Hall (Willis’) on their visit to this area, on September 17, 1987.  Wilson Goff was driving them around to see Rich Island, Float Island and Owen Island.  They stopped at Toad Hall and Peg, Jack and I walked up behind Schottmiller,s cottage.  We peeked in the window at the framed pictures that Betty Nelson had sent them - one of the old hotel, and one of the view from the hotel.  Then we walked to the old chimney and Peg took a broken brick from the fireplace.  I mentioned that she had been sent to sleep in a tent because she cried at night.  She said that it was her young brother.  She thought her sister Betty and her brother had all the old photos taken on Float.  Her brother was living with their parents when they died and closed up the old home.  The last time Peg came to the hotel was in 1938 (or so).  They were about the only guests who came.  By 1938 the hotel was on its last legs I guess.  Peg mentioned that it had been very prosperous in its day, with many prominent guests.

The fireplace was the only heat. The only light was by oil lamps.  There was a bathroom at the end of each floor.  There was a wide stairway or steps from the water level to the hotel.

 

Peg and Jack Weikart

R.D. #2 Box 315E

Chestertown, Maryland 21620

 

Note: Jack Weikart was employed by Exxon in alternative energy research as was Peter at G.E.

 

August 28, 1989

 

Information from Margaret Reid that she got from Olive Shipman week of August 21, 1989.

 

Mr. Goodwilly owned Ivy Lea Inn and subsequently bought O’Connor Island.  He bought O’Connor Island so he could sleep there, because he snored so much and kept the guests awake as well as his family.  Mr. Goodwilly was involved in the Otis Elevator Company.

 

Esther Pennington and her new husband are on O’Connor Island now (1989).  Esther bought O’Connor Island from Goodwilly’s son in 1956.

 

Re; Downie Island: Mr. MacFarlin, from the hotel, met the guests with a horse and cart and drove them to the hotel from the dock.

 

May 29, 1990

 

Margaret Reid and her brother came to their island in 1940 and tented on the east side of the island that they called Chingaucousie, now called Potato island on the charts. At that time Owen Island was owned by the Meyers.  They had a mahogany inboard boat and each noon they went from Owen Island to the Glenn House for the noon meal.  The Reid’s could see this from their tent location.

 

The following information is from Olive Shipman via Margaret Reid:

- Dr. Meyers sold Owen Island to the Jordan’s

- Moonies had a general store and gas dock at the present public dock ant Ivy Lea.  A stone building that is still there was the store.  One day Dr. Meyers went to Moonies to get gas for his boat.  He pulled the flag out of its socket and put the gas pump nozzle in the flag socket and started to fill it with gas.  There was an explosion and Dr. Meyers was thrown into the water  and suffered some burns.  Olive Shipman did not say he had been drinking but Margaret felt that she inferred it.

Mrs. Meyers had the kitchen built away from the main cottage because she did not like the smell of food cooking.

 

September 1990 from Margared Reid

 

Re: bootlegging.  Andy Truesdale had a large mahogany boat that had doors in it.  If he was stopped by the police he could open the doors and let the bottles sink in the water and be clean”.


Margaret said that when leaves were off the trees they could see the river from their house and could see boats in the river and the comment would be made “There’s the rum runners”.  The Reids lived on King Street West at the foot of Princess Street in Gananoque.

 

From Marion Brennwald:

(Daughter of Verina and Henry Tauber,married to Heinz Brennwald)

Henry Tauber came to the states in 1936 - came through Ellis Island by mistake, because he had a job to come to when he left Europe.  Was rescued by an acquaintance from Gloveresville who is celebrating his 60th wedding anniversary on September 20, 1990.

 

From Henry Tauber, July 14, 1992;

Re: “Injun Joe Island” or Upper Twin Island (on maps)

 

The Bourguets owned Collier Island.  Mr. Bourguet put a teepee and an indian mannequin on the small island off the point of their island.  The island is sometimes referred to as the “Devil’s Oven” or Flower Pot Island.  If you sit in a boat and drift you can drift right around the island.  Apparently Mrs. Bourguet did not like having the Indian and teepee on the small island and complained about it to Mrs. Kuntz on Muslcaster Island.  Mrs. Kuntz took the Indian and teepee and put them on Injun Joe Island (or Upper Twin Island).  The tour boat operators of that time 1950's and 1960's would tell the tourists that the manequin was a petrified Indian chief known as Chief Running Water.

 

When we were first on Downie Island, 1965 the remains of the Indian and teepee were still on Injun Joe Island”.

 

Mr. Tauber also told us that the Bourguets owned Hickey Island and sold it to the Whites.                    September 1998

The well on Rowley Island is 168 feed deep.  The man who drilled the well told Henry that they would have to go down at least 100 feet.

 

August 1998

Verina Tauber died August 22, 1990.

 

In 1881, artist Frank H. Taylor made skethces of this area for Harper’s Weekly. He had property on Round Island.  He sketched , and wife and son added the water colors. The Finmore Art Gallery in Booneville has some of his prints.

 

 

 

Marion bought a page for her mother at Finmore’s

 

There are several paintings of Stave Island by Taylor in the Fallon cottages on that island.

 

The Taubers were  at Mulcaster from 1954 for 3 years, then bought Rowley Is.

 

The Mange’s on Spilsbury Is. have been coming since the mid 1930's.

 

 

 

From Marion Brennwald;

      IN 1878 the Hon. John Haggart, M.P.,and a senior executive of the CPR, bought Mulcaster Island and had a cottage built. The cottage was beautifully finished inside with diagonal boards of clear cedar. I was in the cottage before the government tor it down.

      Stave Is.; The Shack was  owned by A.B. Chafee and Arthur Lyman from Montreal

 

Castle Rest

from Pictorial History of the Thousand Islands.  Editor Adrian G. Ten Cote (around 1977)

 


Mr. George M. Pullman purchased an island in 1862 and construction began on what is now known as Castle Rest.  Initially he erected a very small cottage on the property.  In 1872 he invited President Grant and General Sherman to spend a week at the island; this visit gave the region its first extensive publicity.  The old cottage was later demolished and the structure in the photo (which is similar to the post card that Lee Sabine bought in an antique store) was erected on the same site.  Presently (1977) only the front section of the building remains.

 

There is a picture of the dining room with the following caption: An interior view of the dining room at Castle Rest”, many of these finer summer homes were expensively furnished and decorated.  Many species of fish, probably caught in the Thousand Island area, are hanging on the walls. (Town Historian, Alexandria Bay).

 

Caption with picture of Castle Rest states: This overall picture indicates the size and splendor of Castle Rest”.  Ca 1912. (Town Historian, Alexandria Bay).

 

 

We would love to have your input! Please feel free to send us any text or photographs  that we could add to this site. CHEERS, CHUCK.

 chucktindall@sympatico.ca