Norfolk Then
With most of us sheltering in place this spring, let’s look back at the Norfolk “Shelter.” Designed by architect Alfredo Taylor and still standing at the end of Golf Drive, the pavilion was built on the nine-hole Norfolk Downs as a gathering place for golfers. The large central room with cobblestone walls and a massive […]
Norfolk Then
Now on the grounds of the Norfolk Library, the Welch Memorial Fountain once stood on Greenwoods Road at the entrance to West Side Road. It was erected in 1895 in honor of Dr. William Wickham Welch, Norfolk’s town doctor for 53 years. Dr. Welch’s son, William Henry, pursued a career in medicine as well, but […]
Norfolk Then…
Meet the Bishop family outside their home near the Norfolk-North Goshen town line. There’s Ernest and Sadie to the left of their father, George; Jennie in the center behind Elsie; Martha and Mabel in front of their mother, Rose, who holds the baby. Although the children aren’t particularly bundled up, it must be cold: a […]
Norfolk Then…
Harvesting ice was an important industry in Norfolk before the advent of mechanical refrigeration in the 1920s, and frozen ponds were kept free of snow not for skating but to keep the ice from getting soft before the harvest. Ebenezer Burr advertised “Tobey Pond Ice” delivered door-to-door on hot summer days, and the Norfolk Ice […]
Norfolk Then…
Stopping to chat with a friend in a passing vehicle would be unthinkable these days at the busy curve on Route 44 near the entrance to North Street. Back then, there was an apartment house on Memorial Green where the War Monument and evergreens now stand. It had been built in 1835 as a business […]
Norfolk Then…
Still standing today at the south end of the Green (but without the front porch), Crissey Place was one of several early 20th century hostelries in Norfolk. It was owned and operated by Miss Cora Brown and named after the Crissey family, who had lived there for almost 100 years. Opening in the 1920s, it […]
Norfolk Then . . .
Imagine photographer Marie Kendall in a long skirt climbing Canaan Mountain with all her gear—view camera, lenses, tripod, dark cloth, glass plate negatives—and you’ll have some idea of the difficulties she faced to get this shot of West Norfolk about 1890. Ashpohtag Road stretches into the distance through hills that have been stripped bare, the […]
Norfolk Then—September 2019
The Temperance Band has gathered outside Marie Kendall’s barn about 1890. Kendall was a member of the Women’s Christian Temperance Union, and the children wear the WCTU’s white ribbon badge. Although they look a little young to be enlisted for the cause of abstinence from alcohol, it was not the first time Norfolk children took […]
Norfolk Then
Tennis at Town Hall? The building we know as Town Hall was originally the Eldridge Gymnasium, built in 1892. Located within easy walking distance of hotels and boarding houses in Norfolk at the turn of the last century, the Gymnasium was a popular gathering place for both residents and visitors. People played croquet on the lawn and tennis […]
Norfolk Then
Roller skating fever struck Norfolk in 1885, as it did many towns across the country. The Norfolk Roller Skating Association that year had 30 members, and the rink was in the newly constructed Village Hall, now known as Infinity Hall, pictured here at that time. The first roller-skating rink had been opened at the Atlantic […]