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Locality: Liberty, New York

Phone: +1 845-292-2394



Address: 46 S Main St 12754 Liberty, NY, US

Website: www.libertymuseum.com

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Liberty Museum & Arts Center 27.04.2021

Joyner’s Store , White Sulphur Springs .

Liberty Museum & Arts Center 18.04.2021

Main St Liberty. 1900

Liberty Museum & Arts Center 29.01.2021

RETROSPECT by John Conway June 9, 2017 THE GREAT LIBERTY FIRE... On a most unlucky Friday the thirteenth, June 13, 1913, half of the village of Liberty’s business section was wiped out in one of the most destructive fires in the history of Sullivan County. It was sometime after 4 o’clock on that afternoon that the fire alarm sounded, and by the time firemen responded, a number of buildings were already in flames. When it was all over some three hours later, the village was in ruins, with estimates of the damage reaching as high as half a million dollars. That’s nearly $12.5 million today. For many years, the Liberty fire ranked as the second most devastating fire in the county’s history in terms of property loss, topped only by the epic 1909 fire in the village of Monticello, which resulted in property losses well in excess of $1 million. Although it was never officially established how the Liberty blaze started, it is generally believed to have ignited in the barn located behind the Roosa & Lancashire grocery store. It is known that shortly before the fire was detected, a man named Thomas Washington had made a delivery of hay to the barn, which served as a storehouse for the grocery, but it is not known if that was in any way connected to the start of the fire. In a rare special edition "Extra" the Liberty Register reported the next day that "with such incredible speed did the flames spread that they had gained uncontrollable headway before the firemen had hooked their hose to the hydrants. The place in which the fire started was thickly surrounded by frame buildings that were easy prey to the flames. The firemen were hardly aware that the fire had started before the flames had raced over the entire block." Claimed by the conflagration that afternoon was the social and cultural center of the village, the imposing Liberty Music Hall, B.F. Green’s Department Store, the Baptist Church, Jafnel’s Pharmacy, Kniffen’s stationery store, B.E. Misner’s confectionery store, James Mance’s pharmacy, William Fahrenholz’s stationery store, Hasbrouck’s apartment house, Roosa & Lancashire’s grocery and its barn, and Sherwood’s livery stable. Most of those establishments also lost their entire contents, as well. Many other structures suffered varying degrees of damage in the blaze, and for a time, the entire village appeared threatened. Former County Historian Manville B. Wakefield, writing in his 1970 book, To The Mountains by Rail, quotes longtime Liberty resident Dewey Borden’s vivid recollections of the excitement that day. "‘The fire whistle was just starting to blow,’ recalls Dewey Borden, ‘when I looked up the narrow alley between the Roosa building and the Hasbrouck building to see flames roaring out of the Sherwood stables at the far end.’" Liberty firemen soon concluded that they were overmatched by the fire. According to Wakefield, "as the flames tore through the 112-foot long Roosa & Lancashire grocery and fruit store, emergency calls went out to surrounding communities, and soon Livingston Manor Hose Co., arriving on a special O and W train, was on the scene, quickly followed by Mountain Hose Co. of Monticello, Jeffersonville Hose Co., and the Lake Huntington Hose Co." In addition, more than 200 firemen from Middletown were on their way to the scene by train, only to be stopped in Summitville when Liberty officials realized they would likely arrive too late to help. "When it was apparent that things were out of control, willing hands set to moving merchandise out of Green’s Clothing Store, located in the Music Hall building," Wakefield writes. "‘You never saw a bunch of guys move so fast,’ recalls Borden, ‘as they carried out showcases, racks of clothes and assorted merchandise and piled it up on the lawn across the street in front of the Baptist Church.’ "After sweeping the Hasbrouck block housing the James B. Mance pharmacy and the William Fahrenholz stationery and news store, the advance of the flames up Main Street was finally halted by the concrete-block Hasbrouck’s Liquor Store." The Baptist Church was almost saved through the heroic efforts of its pastor, Reverend Ralph Thorne. When the towering church steeple caught a spark and burst into flames, low water pressure prevented the firemen from reaching it with their hoses. Rev. Thorne organized a bucket brigade, which had nearly extinguished the fire when the roof caught, and soon the entire building was consumed. In the aftermath of the fire, word spread that at least one life had been lost, but that rumor proved unfounded. There were injuries, and the human toll would no doubt have been considerably steeper if not for the valiant efforts of the firemen, who risked their lives time and again to rescue those trapped on the upper floors of buildings. While the Register reported that estimates "from men well qualified to judge" put the property loss at somewhere between $250,000 and $500,000, merchants indicated that their combined insurance policies would cover no more than about $75,000. Nonetheless, all pledged to rebuild quickly, and most did. An eerie postscript to the great Liberty fire of 1913 is all but forgotten today. Just three days later, a devastating fire claimed most of neighboring Ferndale’s commercial district, destroying Kantor’s Pharmacy, Hirsch’s grocery store, Katzmer’s candy store, Steigert’s bottling works, and eight other community businesses. Despite the almost inconceivable coincidence, no link between the two fires has ever been established. John Conway is the Sullivan County Historian. He can be reached by e-mail at [email protected]. PHOTO CAPTION: A crowd watches as the great Liberty fire of June 13, 1913 destroys a large part of the village's business district.

Liberty Museum & Arts Center 13.01.2021

New York Foundation for the Arts is accepting applications for $7,000 unrestricted Fellowships from New York State-based artists in Fiction, Folk/Traditional Arts, Interdisciplinary Work, Painting, and Video/Film through February 10, 2021.

Liberty Museum & Arts Center 02.01.2021

This is a picture of South Main Street looking towards North Main Street... It is a 1907 picture... It shows the Green Building location... Meaning that is the building that was on the corner of North Main and Chestnut in 1907 ..

Liberty Museum & Arts Center 25.12.2020

This plaque is on a stone next to the first tee of the Sullivan County Golf Course . On July 21, 1931 , Otto Hillig ‘s plane ‘ The Liberty’ took off from... this site on the first transatlantic flight. Hillig’s and Hoiris put Liberty on the map by making the first two-man transatlantic flight , a monumental achievement in aeronautics and for mankind.

Liberty Museum & Arts Center 29.11.2020

This week's Retrospect...

Liberty Museum & Arts Center 19.11.2020

Main Street, Liberty 1940's

Liberty Museum & Arts Center 07.11.2020

Academy Theater , North Main Street We all have such good memories of the movies we have seen in this summer theater... Yes, back years ago, Liberty had 2 movie theaters . This was the summer movie theater ...

Liberty Museum & Arts Center 02.11.2020

Berners Sporting Goods was located next next to the movie theater years ago , and then they moved to the A & P Market that was located on upper North Main Street .

Liberty Museum & Arts Center 28.10.2020

History of White Sulphur Springs History of Robertsonville,/ White Sulphur Springs , NY White Sulphur Springs is a hamlet in Liberty, Sullivan County..., New York. It was originally named Robertsonville in honor of Jonathan Bradley Robertson, for his service during the War of 1812. White Sulphur Springs is a hamlet in Liberty, Sullivan County, New York. It was originally named Robertsonville in honor of Jonathan Bradley Robertson, for his service during the War of 1812.[1] Robertson came to the vicinity of Liberty, New York in 1807, from Bridgeport, Connecticut. The hamlet changed its name for the local White Sulphur Springs House hotel in December, 1890. The Hamlet has always been a rural area. At one time it was surrounded by many small dairy farms and had a cheese factory operating within its bounds. In the 1890’s and early 1900’s it was doing a thriving hotel and Boarding House business. It was during this period of time that a large hotel, called the White Sulphur Springs House was built. The hotel took its’ name from the Sulphur Spring whose waters were supposed to have medicinal benefits which were obtainable either by drinking or bathing in it. In December of 1890 Robertsonville officially changed its’ name to White Sulphur Springs, no doubt to further help the promotion of the tourist trade. In later years many additional hotels were constructed in the Hamlet and the business flourished in the summer for many years. The Jewish Community Center of White Sulphur Springs was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999. Pictures Joyner’s Post Office Square Main Street Offices An old picture of White Sulphur Springs Main Street White Sulphur Springs

Liberty Museum & Arts Center 21.10.2020

Mural showing history of Liberty painted by Lee Parks(my Dad). It will hang in Liberty Museum.