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Author: Saratoga TODAY

Albert John Dewey Jr.

SARATOGA SPRINGS — Albert John (Joseph) Dewey Jr, 73, passed away Dec. 11, 2023. Visitation from 4-7 p.m. on Wed., Dec. 20 at Burke Funeral Home, 628 North Broadway. Mass is 10 am, Thurs. Dec. 21 at St. Clement’s Church. Burial will at 11:30 a.m. at GBHS Saratoga National Cemetery, 200 Duell Rd. Remembrances may be made at www.burkefuneralhome.com. 

Charles L. Burling

YORK, PA — Charles L Burling (Chuck) died suddenly December 9, 2023. A resident of Gansevoort and Saratoga from 1991-2013. Calling hours 10-11 a.m., December 16, 2023 at Burke Funeral Home. Service at 11, burial in Greenridge Cemetery following. Memorial donations to Liberty Foundation (Amsterdam, NY) or Keystone VHF Club of York Pennsylvania. www.burkefuneralhome.com

Andrew C. Manz III

ALBANY — Andrew C. Manz III, 92, of Saratoga Springs passed into eternal life on December 11, 2023. A funeral home service will be at 2 p.m. on Sat. Dec. 16, 2023 at the Burke Funeral Home, 628 N. Broadway, Saratoga Springs, NY 12866

Remembrances may be made at www.burkefuneralhome.com

Initiative Launched to Bring Physicians to Rural and Underserved Areas of Upstate New York

Washington, D.C. — The Northern Border Regional Commission (NBRC) launched its J-1 Visa Program in collaboration with New York, Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont to make quality healthcare accessible to rural America by easing the visa requirements for nondomestic physicians who trained in the U.S. if they agree to practice in underserved areas, Congresswoman Elise Stefanik, R-Schuylerville, announced Dec. 5.

“Following my advocacy, the Northern Border Regional Commission will launch its J-1 Visa Program to help provide rural and underserved areas across Upstate New York and the North Country with accessible, quality, and affordable healthcare helping to alleviate the physician shortage,” Stefanik said, in a statement. 

NBRC will recommend the U.S. Department of Homeland Security waive what is known as the “two-year home-country physical presence requirement” for eligible physicians seeking to work at healthcare institutions and practices within the NBRC territory. The purpose is to help alleviate a physician workforce shortage disproportionately affecting rural America.

In July 2022, Stefanik led her colleagues in a letter specifically calling on the NBRC to implement a J-1 visa waiver program that would allow nondomestic physicians trained in the U.S. to work in health professional shortage areas or medically underserved areas within the NBRC’s area of jurisdiction, according to a statement released by Stefanik. 

Saratoga County History Center Issues Call for 2024 Award Nominations

BALLSTON SPA — The Saratoga County History Center at Brookside Museum has issued a call for nominations for its third annual Saratoga County Public History Award. 

Each year the SCHC confers the award on two individuals who have made a significant contribution in preserving, interpreting, researching, publishing, promoting or otherwise extending knowledge and understanding of the history of Saratoga County.

The Public History Award is designed to recognize the long-standing efforts of those who share a passion for Saratoga County history, and to encourage others to become involved in local history projects and activities.

Nominations for 2024 winners can be submitted to the Saratoga County History Center at brooksidemuseum.org/2023/12/history-center-issues-call-for-2024-award-nominations/ by Jan. 15, 2024. Submissions should include a short biography of the nominee, a description of their contributions and references.

The Award Selection Committee will review and select winners by March 1. An award ceremony will be held in April at Brookside Museum in Ballston Spa to honor the award recipients. 

Saratoga Springs Police Department Awarded Certificate of Accreditation

Photo provided.

SARATOGA SPRINGS —The Saratoga Springs Police Department was formally awarded its first-ever Certificate of Accreditation by the New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services (DCJS), city Public Safety Commissioner Jim Montagnino announced on Dec. 7.  

This represents a major milestone for the Department, as it has demonstrated that it has met and maintains 111 separate rigorous State standards of excellence in recruitment, training, operations and management, Montagnino said, highlighting Chief Tyler McIntosh, Lt. Angela McGovern “and the many other members of the Department who put in enormous effort in completing this task.”  Lt. McGovern was separately awarded a Certificate of Achievement by DCJS for her work towards accreditation.

“This milestone has eluded our city for two decades. In just six months on the job, however, Chief McIntosh led his team to the successful completion of this mission,” the commissioner said. 

The City Charter of Saratoga Springs has mandated a plan to achieve State accreditation for its Police Department since January 2004. 

Accreditation is also among the 50 Points of Police Reform adopted by the City Council pursuant to former Governor Cuomo’s Executive Order in 2021. 

A History of Patriotism: Local Kids “Help Save our Fighting Men!”

Photo provided by The Saratoga County History Roundtable.

The move into World War II by the United States brought about many changes for this country’s citizens. The most important was in the lives of the sixteen million men and women who served during those years and of course the over four hundred thousand who gave their lives, making the ultimate sacrifice for their country.

Back at home communities coped with rationing of gasoline, sugar, tires, and other products to support the war effort. Other steps that both young and old in this country were asked to take were buying war bonds and collecting scrap metal and rubber. Likely the most unusual item was the collection of milkweed pods, something desperately needed by the navy for life preservers. As we will see, in Saratoga County, both adults and young people stepped up and did their part to harvest milkweed and help protect the lives of our servicemen and women.

Only hours after Pearl Harbor, Japan attacked the Philippines and the American forces stationed there then. This successful invasion gave Japan control of the Dutch East Indies’ oil reserves and access to abundant raw materials in the region. One of these resources was kapok, a fiber obtained from the kapok tree that grows in the rainforests of Asia. The fiber, light and very buoyant, was used in life preservers by both the military and civilians.

As a replacement for this critical component of life vests was needed, the American industry began searching for likely alternatives. The most effective substitute was milkweed floss, with tests showing that a pound of this fiber would keep an adult afloat for over 40 hours.

Milkweed was quickly given the status of a wartime strategic material and the government allocated funds for its collection and processing. Soon the call went out to pick milkweed pods, with open mesh bags being distributed to schools in regions where milkweed was prevalent.

In Waterford, a drive to pick the pods was organized by the local Lions Club, with members of area Scout Troops, 4-H Clubs, and students from the Waterford Schools pitching in. As an incentive to participate the Waterford Lions Club offered prizes of three dollars, two dollars, and one dollar to boys and girls who collected the greatest number of filled bags.

With one-half million pounds needed to make life vests for the military in 1944, every bag picked was vitally important. In the spring of 1945, the milkweed pods that had been collected locally were brought to the Saratoga County Fair Grounds in Ballston Spa for shipment to the processing plant in Michigan. The eight thousand bags that had been collected from Saratoga, Warren, and Washington Counties would provide enough floss to fill four thousand life vests for the military. Overall, New York State collected enough pods to exceed its goal of gathering enough milkweed to fill over a quarter million life jackets.

The milkweed needed to be picked before they broke open and scattered the floss, leaving only a small window of opportunity to collect the pods. Once filled, the mesh collection bags were hung outside to dry, with two bags needed to fill one life vest.

In many counties, it was the 4-H Club agents who oversaw the work of distributing the collection bags. One example was Samuel B Dorrance the agent for Rensselaer County who passed out two thousand of these open mesh bags. In a newspaper account of his efforts, published in the September 15, 1944, Troy Record, he gave these instructions for collecting the pods: When the seeds are brown, the pods are ready for picking but definitely not before, as they will mold, he said. “Those in the northern part of the county are not yet ready. It isn’t necessary to examine each pod if a test shows that the majority of the seeds are ripe.

He continued with the necessity of leaving the bags out to dry for at least two weeks, preferably hanging them from a fence at least a foot off the ground, after which they could be brought indoors.

Dedicated to the slogan of “Don’t Let Our Sailor’s Sink” 4-H boys and girls roamed the countryside collecting milkweed from fencerows and open fields. Lifelong Saratoga County resident Marion Crandall shared this memory of that time while growing up in Bacon Hill, a farming community near Schuylerville: In the orchard there were a lot of milkweeds… they needed kapok for the war…for life preservers…it was a 4-H project, so we went to the orchard, picked milkweed pods, and put them in big onion bags, mesh bags.

The efforts of the young people in Bacon Hill were a success, as by September of 1944 they had collected eleven bags of milkweed pods.

With the close of the war in September of 1945, collection of milkweed floss was no longer necessary, and the program was ended. While it is impossible to count the number of lives that were saved through this work by the children of Saratoga County, what they accomplished was vitally important to the war effort and even now we can look back with pride at what they achieved.

December 8 – 14, 2023


This week’s fabulous home at 75 Arrowhead Rd in Saratoga Springs listed by Kate Naughton and sold by Mara King and Christine Hogan Barton from Roohan Realty. This home sold for $2,500,000.

BALLSTON

Eastline Holdings LLC sold property at 31 Appleton St to Nicole Kerber for $590,040

Stephen Brenon sold property at 12 Midline Rd to Paul Perrault for $940,000

Matthew O’Connor sold property at 528 Hop City Rd to Saratoga Custom Woodworking for $195,000

CORINTH

Christine Callear sold property at 53 Locust Ridge Dr to Phillip Pendergast for $300,000

GALWAY

Daniel Szabo sold property at 3070 Parkwood Dr to Lance Kilpatrick for $315,000

Alisa Jenney sold property at 5119 Jockey St to Eric Sebast for $115,000

Bernard Leerkes sold property at 4931 Jockey St to Felicia Segelken for $410,000

Deborah Bennett sold property at 1938 Perth Rd to Casey Avery for $301,000

MALTA 

Michael Lyeth sold property at 4 Candlewood to Eugene Ninestein for $485,000

MILTON

Mark Jackson sold property at 5 Edmund Dr to Marie Baker for $265,000

RSD Development sold property at 7 Jennifer Lane to John Tine for $130,000

Thomas Burke sold property at 1 Woodland Ct to National Residential Nominee Services for 479,900

Leon White sold property at 4 Wyndham Way to John Gysel for $510,000

SARATOGA

Tina Martin sold property at 183 River Rd to Daniel Delorier for $146,500

SARATOGA SPRINGS

Med Home Services LLC sold property at 65 Ash St to Ryan Metzger for $232,500

Nancy Edmands sold property at 26 Lamplighter Ln to Fiona Fahy for $248,000

Penelope Twitchell sold property at 14 Victoria Ln to Penelope TwitchellChase trustee for $375,000

Paul Steciuk sold property at 56 Union Ave Apt 3 to Gregory Frank for $625,000

Shakedown Street LLC sold property at 97 East Ave #205 to Jenna Potter for $372,500

Raymond Martin sold property at 457 Crescent Ave to Lawrence Doyle for $2,495,000

Eric Riddervold sold property at 5 Wagon Wheel Trail to Brian Hall for $335,000

Jason Lange sold property at 24 Bog Meadow Rd to William Flynt for $680,000

Nicole Evers sold property at 340 Grand Ave to Rex Steves for $629,500

WILTON

Jennifer Roshong sold property at 13 Stonehedge Dr to Allison Butler for $449,500.

Anna Kozlowska sold property at 31 Apple Tree Lane to Saad Farahat for $650,000

Tracy Eveland sold property at 23 Trolley Bed Lane to Matthew Newberry for $180,000

Margaret Scherfee sold property at 48 Fieldstone Dr to Mark Concilla for $488,000

Edie Road LLC sold property at 31 Cannon Royal Dr to Thomas Rider for $320,000

Public Safety Commissioner-Elect Tim Coll Appoints Deputy

SARATOGA SPRINGS — Newly-elected Saratoga Springs Public Safety Commissioner Tim Coll announced he has appointed Daniel G. Charleson as Deputy Public Safety Commissioner. Coll’s two-year term begins Jan. 1, 2024.  

Charleson has more than 29 years of experience with the New York State Police, retiring in late November as a Captain and acting Major. His most recent assignment was as Detail Commander for the Protective Services Unit (PSU) which provides protection for NYS Governor Kathy Hochul and the First Family as well as other dignitaries across New York.

Charleson has a master’s degree in public administration from Marist College and extensive experience with Inter-Agency Coordination and Special Events, Coll said in a statement. 

Charleson, a resident of Saratoga Springs, has served as a Board Member and Commissioned Officer Delegate for NYS Troopers PBA, representing more than 220 Lieutenants, Captains, and Majors across the Division of State Police.