This Week in History
1907 Archive
January
Tuesday, January 1, 1907
Blue skies and bright sunshine greet the New Year at dawn. It is the first clear day in a week, and a fine one to finally get outside and take a walk, which many do. The streets are filled with well wishers.
ANSONIA - The Pure Food Law goes into effect in Connecticut. Nevertheless, the appearance at Ansonia grocery stores is virtually unchanged. Many merchants don’t know much about it, other than the fact that many food manufacturers have discontinued products and brands that do not meet its specifications. Labels must now contain food ingredients.
DERBY - Nearly 800 are present at the sunlight hop and dance at the Gould Armory, a record crowd.
January 2
DERBY - Roller skating will likely be discontinued at Gould Armory, because the owners are upset that the floor is being damaged by skates, and continuing it would ruin the dance floor. It took more time to clean up after the 200 skaters on December 26 than it did to clean up after hosting 800 dancers on January 1.
SEYMOUR - The town officially has 36 societies, lodges, and associations, many of which are secret and beneficial. With a population of 354, that's one society for every 100 people, not including the numerous church clubs, etc.
January 3
ANSONIA - The long drawn out affair which began when Aaron Olderman moved a building into the new fire limits finally ends when he is found guilty in City Court of violating city ordinances and fined $100.
ANSONIA - The police made 225 arrests in 1906, as opposed to 270 in 1905. They were: Intoxication - 51; Assault - 26; Liquor violations - 25; Breach of peace - 16; Intoxication and abusive language - 12; Burglary - 8; Theft - 8; Intoxication and breach of peace - 5; Vagrancy - 5; Assault and beach of peace - 4, Murder - 1.
DERBY - Derby Neck residents want trolley service extend to them, in a loop that would go up Housatonic Avenue, up to Hawthorne Avenue, then down to Elizabeth Street.
SEYMOUR - Many have colds in town.
January 4
ANSONIA - The dwindling Thomas M. Redshaw Post GAR has vacated the top floor of the Hotchkiss block, known as Grand Army Hall, and leased rooms in the Colburn Block. It was organized after the Civil War with 125 members, and met in the Ansonia Opera House. In 1896 it moved to Grand Army Hall, at which time it had 100 members.
January 5
December 1906 saw a high of 54 degrees, and a low of -2. A total of 4.13" of rain fell over a total of 11 rainy days, including 2.03" which fell in a 24 period December 30 & 31. Six inches of snow also fell.
ANSONIA - Fire in back of a store and tenement building owned by Max Olderman on 414 Main Street at 8 AM. Occupants panic and start throwing belongings out of the windows, but the Fire Department puts the blaze out before it could spread.
SEYMOUR - One of the oldest buildings in downtown Seymour has been sold - a blacksmith shop built before 1798 on Maple Street and Pearl Street.
Monday, January 7, 1907
Orthodox Christmas. Many factories allow Greek and Russians to have the day off to celebrate.
The temperature rises 68 degrees. The unseasonably warm weather is putting a severe strain on the ice companies, which rely upon cold weather to manufacture their product. A thunderstorm passes through at 10:30 PM. Many have colds due to the variances in weather.
ANSONIA - Great prevalence of la grippe in the city. Doctors and druggists are busy. The West Side is particularly hard hit.
ANSONIA - 150 attend a celebration of the tenth anniversary of the Webster Hose Company #3 at its Platt Street firehouse.
DERBY - Democrat Alfred F. Howe is sworn in as Derby's new mayor. The oath was administered by the man he defeated in the November election, outgoing Mayor Hubbell. Other city officials are sworn in too.
DERBY - Mayor Benjamin Hubbell's administration ends. The newspaper cites the major improvements on New Haven Avenue and Housatonic Avenue, as well as sewage improved, as some of his major accomplishments.
January 8
The temperature drops 30 degrees by early morning.
ANSONIA - Johnny o' the Woods is in the City. This well known traveler has been walking a circuit in Connecticut for many years. However, the Sentinel notes that age is catching up to him, and that he is "becoming a pitiable object". When told to leave a Main Street restaurant he was given food, he grew so violent that the police chief was called.
SHELTON - The cash till at the J. Edward Dockery store on Howe Avenue and Bridge Street is stolen in a brazen morning theft, as he stepped out for a moment to talk to someone.
SHELTON - The remodeled and rebuilt hook and ladder truck returns to the Echo Hose H&L Company.
January 9
DERBY - Housatonic Avenue residents between Olivia Street and Third Street complain that some tenants are playing banjos and other instruments, and dancing very late into the night.
OXFORD - The town registered 19 births, 3 marriages, and 14 deaths in 1906. 24 students are currently attending Center School.
January 11
ANSONIA - Considerable complaint over people cheating vending machines by using slugs.
DERBY - 1906 vital statistics: 253 births, 157 marriages, and 186 deaths. This compares to the 266 births, 103 marriages, and 150 deaths in 1905.
OXFORD - The mud on the roads is very deep - up to the wheel hubs in some spots.
January 13
ANSONIA - Johnny o' the Woods is still in town, which is a little unusual because he normally does not stay so long. Many places he used to sleep are now closed to him. He is found tonight by the police in the freight yard, apparently looking for a place to sleep. He is escorted off before he gets hit by a train, and refuses lodging in the lockup.
SEYMOUR - R. Rev. Chauncey B. Brewster, Episcopal Bishop of Connecticut, makes his annual visit to Trinity Church.
Monday, January 14, 1907
DERBY - Clothesline thieves are at work in the Caroline Street and Cottage Street neighborhoods.
SEYMOUR - Wood dealers arrive in town, pulling timber on large sleds with difficulty. There was adequate snow in the Oxford hills to do so, but there is little if any snow in town.
January 15
SHELTON - Southern New England Telephone Company (SNET) is installing audiophones in Huntington Congregational Church to assist people with hearing difficulties. The device uses a telephone circuit.
January 16
ANSONIA - There Savings Bank of Ansonia has 6,852 depositors.
January 17
The weather turns bitter cold - 22 below in some areas at midnight. By 6 AM it has risen 4 above in Ansonia. A snowstorm breaks out later that morning, and dumps 5" by evening.
DERBY - George Pixley will reopen the Bassett House around March 1. Furniture being bought in New York City at this time. The hotel has been closed since June.
SEYMOUR - Trolley car slips off the rail in the snow and hits a telegraph pole 30' away on South Main Street. No injuries.
Monday, January 21, 1907
ANSONIA - Jumbo trolley car derails on Bridge Street. No injures.
DERBY - About 2,000 people line the Housatonic riverbank, as well as the Huntington Bridge and the railroad bridge, at sunrise despite a 30 mile per hour wind, to view what appears to be a sea serpent. It appeared to be 50' long, and every now and then what appeared to be a head would rise out of the water, and its body would twist all the way down the body to the tail, which would point one way or another. To some it appeared that it was swimming slowly up the river. Some claimed it was first sighted at 6:30 AM under the railroad bridge, and had swum halfway to the Huntington Bridge. Others claimed to see water spouting from the head. It appeared to have scales that glistened in the morning sunlight. Finally a man who had been watching the thing for an hour near the water's edge declared it had not changed position the whole time he had watched it. He identified that the "serpent" was actually long pieces of rope or cloth that were caught on a stump. The scales were small pieces of ice that had formed on the object. The spouting was caused by boys who were hiding nearby and throwing rocks at it.
SEYMOUR - Many people want to change Seymour's name to Humphreys, and some are proposing a special town meeting. David Humphreys established Humphreysville in the early 1800s. It was renamed Seymour after Connecticut's governor at the time, as a means of gaining votes towards splitting with Derby in 1850 in the State Legislature. As the debate continues, a few old timers stir superstitions by recalling how an old railroad engine originally named Seymour was renamed Humphreys. After that, it met many misfortunes.
January 22
ANSONIA - A brass cannon used for many years by the T.M. Redshaw Post GAR is moved to City Hall. It is placed under the main staircase, in the basement. The cannon was one of the mountain howitzers used by Union Gen. Franz Siegel in Missouri during Civil War.
January 23
Temperature 3 to 10 below overnight. Many frozen water pipes.
ANSONIA - Quillinan's Reservoir has ice 9-10" thick.
SEYMOUR - The Citizen's Engine Company's fire engine, the only steam fire engine in the Valley, is shipped to Bigelow Boiler Works in New Hampshire for a new boiler.
SHELTON - Ground broken for a temporary St. Joseph's church building in rear of the new parish's recently purchased property off Coram Avenue. The building will be a plain structure, measuring 65'x35'.
January 24
Coldest January morning since 1886.
ANSONIA - Ice harvesting begins on Quillinan's Reservoir off Beaver Street by the Ansonia & Derby Ice Company.
DERBY - Albert H. Yudkin's new wood tenement house on Derby Avenue near Bank Street is completely destroyed by fire. The building had 2 stories, and housed 3 families, all related to Mr. Yudkin. There were two stores on the first floor, Mr. Yudkin's grocery and the Cohen dry goods store, which is where the fire originated. The blaze goes to two alarms, with all four companies of the Derby Fire Department responding. The temperature is 4 below zero, causing water drops to freeze in mid-air and fall to the ground. Ice forms everywhere. Six to eight firemen are treated for frostbite.
DERBY - The Ansonia & Derby Ice Company is harvesting ice at Pink House Cove.
DERBY - The Board of Education passes a resolution that children caught smoking going to, from, or at school will be suspended on the first offense, and expelled on the second.
January 25
Using 1903-4 figures, Derby ranks 23rd out of the 168 towns in Connecticut in terms of school spending per pupil. Ansonia ranks 100, and Huntington is 122.
ANSONIA - 2,000 tons of ice have been removed from Qullinan's Reservoir so far. The ice company is trying to make up for the late start in the ice cutting season, with 60 men cutting, and numerous teams transporting the blocks to ice houses. Electric lights have been set up to illuminate the pond so work can continue into the evening.
ANSONIA - Close call when a long, slow freight train slams on its brakes and stops just 2 feet away from broadsiding a trolley car on Bridge Street.
January 26
DERBY - Much complaint about the heating system at Sterling Opera House, which also houses City Hall, the police, and a fire company. Mayor Howe has steam fitters looking over the building to remedy the situation.
January 27
ANSONIA - At this time there are 70 men working at Quillinan's Reservoir. 4,000 to 5,000 tons have been taken by the Ansonia & Derby Ice Company. The ice is now 11-12" thick. Despite the late start, it will be a good ice harvest this year.
DERBY - The police raid the Durrschmidt building on lower Main Street on this fine Sunday, and find a hidden saloon in full operation. The saloonkeeper and 13 men are arrested.
DERBY - George S. Arnold, who was born September 30, 1850, dies in New York City. He was warden of Birmingham in 1887 and 1888, during which the Sterling Opera House was built.
Monday, January 28, 1907
DERBY - 8" thick ice being harvested by 50 men on Lake Housatonic, by the Ansonia & Derby Ice Company.
SEYMOUR - Merchants' Ice Company completes ice harvesting its pond. Its storehouse is filled.
SHELTON - The New York City firm that is starting a box factory in the Scattergood Building gets only get 30 applicants, many of which are already employed. They are looking for 100 females, but the economy is so good help is scarce.
January 29
ANSONIA - Much sleighing and sledding going on. Prospect, Fourth, Hill, Jewett, High, Maple, and Grove Streets are popular. Mayor Charters will post Fourth Street due to the number of near misses with the Seymour trolley. A Woodbridge Street boy is thrown from a sled on North Prospect Street and is unconscious for half an hour, but recovers.
ANSONIA & OXFORD - The Ansonia High School senior and junior classes take evening sleighs to Oxford, where they have supper and a dance at the Oxford Hotel.
DERBY - Storm Engine Company members are shocked when they realize how much room the tanks for the new fire alarm will take in their basement - nearly the whole area. They now have little room for storage.
DERBY - New Haven Avenue is a popular place for sledding today.
OXFORD - Oxford is a popular destination for sleighing parties. This night there are 3 from Seymour, 3 from Naugatuck, and three or more from Ansonia and Derby.
SHELTON - The hills on Coram Avenue and Wooster Street are popular spots for sledding.
January 30
SEYMOUR - The Little River Manufacturing Company is in receivership. Founded in 1902, they made nail clippers, and were sued by the HC Cook Company of Ansonia for patient infringement.
January 31
6 inches of snow falls overnight. The snow changes to a rainy drizzle later, but there is so much snow on ground it has little effect.
February
Saturday, February 2, 1907
Area groundhogs see their shadow due to the sunny day, which means more weeks of winter.
ANSONIA - Clan MacDonald, Order of Scottish Clans, is formed at German Hall. Many of the Valley's Scottish residents join.
SHELTON - Membership in Echo Hose Hook & Ladder is low. Young men are not inclined to join the volunteer fire company these days.
February 3
DERBY - Rev. George H. Buck celebrates his 20th year as pastor of St. James Episcopal Church. In that time, he has baptized 502, confirmed 332, performed 161 marriages, and conducted 413 funerals.
Monday, February 4, 1907
A major snowstorm breaks out late in the afternoon, and continues all night.
DERBY - 10" thick ice is now being cut at Lake Housatonic. Unless one or more of the icehouses burns down, there is now enough ice to supply both Derby and Shelton until next winter.
SEYMOUR - The Seymour Congregational Church votes to move the parsonage off the church lot, to make room for the new Albert Swan Memorial Parish House. The Society has an option to move the parsonage on one of 9 lots located on or close to Derby Avenue.
February 5
The snowstorm continues past dawn, dropping about 18". But because of the high winds, in some spots there are 5 to 6 foot high snowdrifts while in other spots the ground is practically bare. All schools are cancelled. Trains are at least one hour late. All country roads are blocked, and heavy teams are trying to break paths through the snowdrifts. Milkmen can't get into the downtown neighborhoods, causing a run on condensed milk in grocery stores, and many of them run out of it by afternoon. Many can't get to work, and mills are running with skeleton crews. The trolley service is very erratic, despite an effort by the trolley companies to keep the tracks plowed. The District Nurse Association visiting nurse breaks her wrist while making a home visit in Derby.
February 6
People are having trouble hitching horses on main streets, as many hitching posts are under the snow. The trolley company is now helping clear snow from the streets that their tracks run on, because their plows caused it to pile up and make them impassible. The day was actually quite sunny, a welcome change as this has been a particularly gloomy winter. Greenhouse owners, preparing for Valentine's Day, are very happy at the sunshine. Travel is improving in the cities, though country roads are still treacherous, and horse-drawn sleighs are tipping over due to the high snowdrifts.
SHELTON - New St. Joseph's chapel has been completed completed and is used for the first time this evening for a Mardi Gras festival. The temporary building is lighted by electricity.
February 7
Coldest morning this winter, at 8 below zero in Ansonia. The coldest spots seem to be on Oxford Road in Seymour, where it is 20 below, and on Bank Street in the same town, where it is 14 below.
February 8
DERBY - The 25th anniversary of the St. Aloysius Total Abstinence and Benevolent Society (TAB) is held at St. Mary's hall. Members refrain from drinking alcohol.
DERBY - The 3rd Annual District Nurse Association meeting held at Derby Public Library. The sole visiting staff nurse made 1050 recorded visits and at least 486 unrecorded visits to Valley homes in the past year. She is convalescing after breaking her wrist from falling in the recent snowstorm.
February 9
ANSONIA - 700 people cram into the Ansonia Opera House for the Webster Hose Company's ball. There were 185 couples in the Grand March alone.
SHELTON - A new firm called the Derby Paper Company purchases the unexpired lease of the former Derby Paper Mills, and will begin operations at the Canal Street factory.
February 10
Another inch of snow falls in the morning, but the later sunshine causes it to melt off surfaces that have already been cleared.
ANSONIA - An apartment fire in the Stillson Block on High Street causes a big commotion and panic within the tenement. Two Eagle Hose H&L Company firefighters are injured.
ANSONIA - Saloon on Main Street and Central Street raided by Ansonia police for conducting business on a Sunday. The proprietor and 2 customers are arrested. News of the raid spreads quickly, and other illegal saloons quickly empty out. Tracks in the snow to these illegal establishments now is making secret entryways obvious.
Monday, February 11, 1907
ANSONIA - State Police serve warrants to 3 officers of the Ansonia Mannerchor club, including a former City Treasurer. Warrants are also served to the proprietors of the German Hotel, Warcholic Hall, and 2 other men of the Russian and Slovenian Liberty Club. All of the warrants are for selling liquor on Sunday. By the time the day was over, a total of 14 warrants were served, and the bar at the Dayton House Hotel was raided.
ANSONIA - The Evening Sentinel reports that people in Ansonia want to rename the Town Farm, popularly called the Poor House, to make it easier for people to go there without the attached stigma. Among the suggestions are Riverview, Sunnyside, or Hillside farm.
February 12
ANSONIA - It is revealed that the Rabbi of Synagogue Benai Israel on Colburn Street has not filed a single marriage certificate since 1892, despite the fact he has performed many ceremonies. He pleads he was not aware he had to file marriage certificates, and will not be prosecuted. By the end of day 16 affidavits have been filed by married couples seeking marriage licenses, with many more pending.
DERBY - Armour & Co is expanding in East Derby. The meat packing firm has bought the old Smith house next door and tore it down. Its expanded property now fronts Derby Avenue, Gilbert Street, and New Haven Avenue, and there are plans to expand the buildings there.
DERBY - Practically every seat is taken at the Sterling Opera House as the Derby Choral Club does their annual recital of Handel's Messiah.
February 13
SEYMOUR - The temperature is recorded at 16 below on Oxford Road.
SEYMOUR - The Merchant's Ice Company has begun supplying its stockholders with ice. The Company has 1300 tons stored for summer.
February 14
Exchanging Valentines is becoming more popular, the mail is loaded with them. Picture cards have become very popular, and unlike previous years there is quite a variety.
DERBY & ANSONIA - Holy Name Society of St. Mary's Parish votes to ask Ansonia's Assumption Parish to help them take better care for St. Mary's Roman Catholic Cemetery, on Wakelee Avenue and Division Street.
DERBY & SHELTON - The Ansonia-Derby Ice Company has 8000 tons of ice stored in ice houses on Lake Housatonic to meet the needs of Derby and Shelton.
OXFORD - Oxford continues to be busy with sleighing excursions from other towns. The Oxford House furnished 350 meals in the past week.
SHELTON - A new Town Clock, which regulates fire alarm tests and incidentally furnishes correct time to citizens, has been placed in position in the post office lobby. The old clock was so bad it was a running joke when someone put a sign reading "This is a Clock" next to it.
SHELTON - Young boy loses part of a finger in a sledding accident on Coram Hill.
February 16
ANSONIA - 2,000 gather to watch man jump off the roof of the YMCA building. The man lowers to the ground slowly, using his patented fire escape which is basically a cable that lowers him slowly. Some Ansonia businessmen have subscribed a total of $26,000 to manufacture it here.
ANSONIA - An Oxford man driving home from New Haven drives his horse and sleigh onto the railroad tracks over the Birmingham Canal, north of Division Street, in the early morning hours. Apparently he thought he was following trolley tracks. The horse breaks its leg on the trestle, and the man falls into canal. While he is struggling in the water, the sleigh is struck by a passing train. The train crew rescues the man, and a police officer is forced to shoot the horse.
DERBY - Over 30 sleds and double-rippers coasting on Watering Trough Hill on New Haven Avenue - including a number of residents from downtown Derby and Shelton. The largest double ripper is called "Man Killer", because man was killed on it 2 years ago, and others have been injured in other accidents involving it. The sled is stored at the R.M. Bassett Hook & Ladder Company firehouse. On this date the "Man Killer" nearly lives up to its name again, when the sled strikes the trolley rails, just as a trolley was approaching. A number of people land in a pile on the tracks, and one man and a girl are pinned underneath the sled. The trolley motorman, who was aware of the sledding, was proceeding cautiously, and stopped the trolley just 10 feet from the struggling group trying to get the sled off the two in time. The man was injured, and required a doctor's attention. Trolley motormen in Derby and other Valley towns are complaining that sleds have been going over the tracks, and several times they have had to slam on the brakes to avoid hitting them.
Monday, February 18, 1907
ANSONIA - The work of replacing the alter at the Church of the Assumption with a new one is continuing. It already is looking very impressive.
February 19
Light snowfall followed by rain.
DERBY - The infamous Derby double-ripper "Man Killer" (see last week) sled smashes into a telegraph pole at the bottom of Watering Trough Hill, and is badly damaged. Twenty persons are thrown off the contraption, and 2 have minor injuries. The accident occurred the same night it set a sledding record on Watering Trough Hill. It was clocked from the top of the hill, to the bottom at New Haven Avenue and Gilbert Street, in 29 seconds.
SHELTON - A double-ripper loses control on Coram Hill, and smashes into utility pole at 10 PM, throwing 16 young men a considerable distance. Four are badly injured, with some knocked unconscious. It takes one young man an hour to wake up.
February 20
ANSONIA - Man badly injured when a sled collides with an ice wagon at the bottom of North State Street hill in Ansonia.
February 21
The snow has been thawing by day and freezing at night, making ideal conditions for coasting.
ANSONIA - A 12 year old girl is struck by a double-ripper on Kankwood Hill and is badly injured. This sled was clocked running from Prindle Avenue to Columbia Street in 48 seconds.
DERBY - Three are injured, the most serious being a broken ankle, when a double-ripper loses control and strikes a tree on the New Haven Avenue hill.
DERBY - A half mile track has been laid out over the frozen water of Lake Housatonic. The track is wide enough for 6 horses to travel abreast, and many impromptu horse races are occurring on it, to the delight of local residents on both sides of the river.
February 22
Many are complaining that the trolleys are inadequately heated this year.
ANSONIA - A double-ripper with 9 children on it overturns while avoiding a horse team on Kankwood Hill. 3 of them are injured. It is estimated that sleds are hitting 60 mph by the time they enter Platt Street.
ANSONIA - A 5 year old suffers fractured collarbone in a sledding accident on Myrtle Avenue hill.
February 23
ANSONIA - The newly patented Engel fire escape, which many local businessmen have invested in and are planning on manufacturing in Ansonia, is tested for a second time, at Main Street's Terry Block. The first person to jump off the block is lowered safely, but the second person to jump off becomes stuck, and is suspended along side of building. He had to be taken into window, in view of several hundred spectators. Mr. Engel notes this is the first time the same device was used for two different people, and that the contraption is still undergoing field testing to identify and eliminate flaws such as this in the design.
February 24
Another 5" of snow falls in the evening.
DERBY - A fire breaks out in a basement of a duplex on East Ninth and Olivia Streets. Derby firemen are hampered by sub-zero temperatures, frozen fire hydrants, and low water pressure, and are unable to stop the house from burning to the ground. The fire spreads to the duplex next door, and that burns to the ground, also. The fire then spreads to 2 more houses on Hawkins Street, but these are saved. Five firefighters are injured, 3 of which suffer from frostbite. This starts a major controversy between the fire department and the Birmingham Water Company, with many statements and denials being issued by city and company officials
Monday, February 25, 1907
Johnny o' the Woods seen again in Seymour, where he was given a set of gloves by a concerned person, and in Ansonia, apparently on his way to Derby. Frequent sightings of this well-known vagrant, second only in fame to the late "Leatherman" lead many to believe he is sticking pretty close to Derby, where is reportedly where he is originally from.
ANSONIA - The Olderman Block, on the corner of Main Street and Colburn Street, is now completed, and the first floor stores are occupied. The second and third floors are ready for tenants. The brick building is now considered one of the largest and best appearing structures on Main Street
DERBY - Stagehands at Sterling Opera House go on strike, in protest over two non-union stagehands that arrived with the company now playing. The company insisted that they perform some of the tasks that the Sterling stagehands normally would do. The show goes on regardless, though the Sterling's stage manager and other members of the company to do all of the scene shifting and operate the curtain, causing some delay between scenes.
February 26
DERBY - A large crowd is on the horse racing track on Lake Housaonic today.
SHELTON - The new Borough of Shelton clock, located in the post office, tests the fire alarm for the first time. Although running the fire horns is its primary purpose, the clock will also be the accepted "standard time" for the borough, which all are expected to set their timepieces around.
February 27
DERBY - The stagehand strike at Sterling Opera House is now over.
DERBY - Many out of towners are visiting the horse race track on Lake Housatonic.
DERBY - The city suffers yet another serious fire, this time in the Benham Shoe Store in the Gould Armory. The fact that the fire was at night, and originated on a floor that is considered the basement on the Main Street side and the third floor on the First Street side complicated things. The fire was very smoky due to burning leather shoes burning. Some neighboring businesses received smoke and water damage, but the fire was confined to the store, and the building survived until 2006.
February 28
ANSONIA - About 85 librarians from all over the state attend the annual meeting of Connecticut Library Association, held at the Ansonia Public Library.
March
Friday, March 1, 1907
SEYMOUR - There are currently 3 houses under quarantine in town. Two are for diphtheria, and the other is for scarlet fever. There have been 35 diphtheria cases in town since the start of December, with five proving fatal.
March 2
ANSONIA - Rain and fog in the morning. The snow is melting fast. Only a layer of ice is left, about 5" thick in places on Main Street and clogging gutters. This causes water to back up to several inches on the south side of City Hall. A dyke composed of ashes is built around that side of City Hall to protect the basement.
ANSONIA - Man shot in the head at the Kelley House, which was a rooming house on Main Street and Bridge Street, lies for 14 hours before discovered. He is taken to New Haven Hospital in critical condition. A suspect is being sought.
ANSONIA - There is talk of fixing up the triangle at the foot of Kankwood Hill, known as the Elm Street Green. It is the largest piece of city-owned open ground, and is being used by neighborhood children as a playground.
Monday, March 4, 1907
DERBY - Controversy over the February 24 fire that destroyed or damaged a number of houses at Olivia Street and East Ninth Street continues. Many are now advocating a horse drawn chemical fire engine. Others are willing to go one step further and say Derby now requires a steam powered fire engine, even though this will necessitate the hiring of a paid fire department. Meanwhile, the Birmingham Water Company continues to be questioned regarding the low water pressure in the fire hydrants in that part of the city.
DERBY - The police commissioner wants a call box system installed in downtown Derby.
DERBY - The average thickness of the ice on Lake Housatonic is 21", and it is even thicker in the coves. This is very unusual.
SHELTON - 29th Annual Report of the Borough of Shelton published. Among its highlights- the Health Report stated the following cases - measles 3, whooping cough 86, scarlet fever 19, typhoid fever 5, diphtheria 16, tuberculosis 2. Ferry School is overcrowded. The Bailiff's Report listed 72 arrests, including 28 for intoxication. The entire Republican slate, along with two Democrats, are elected to the Borough Board, with 204 ballots cast. William S. Healey got the most votes, making him the Borough Warden, the chief elected office.
March 5
A Valley-wide effort has begun to raise funds to care for Johnny o' the Woods, aka John Brennan, the famous, aging transient originally from Derby who wanders the State. After spending a longer amount of time than usual in the area, he was most recently sighted in Southington.
SEYMOUR - The ice on the Housatonic River at Squantuck is 21 to 28" thick. There are fears that when the ice breaks, it will result in a damaging freshet, which were well known in the Housatonic Valley back then..
March 6
DERBY - Extensive renovations have changed just about everything inside the Bassett House. The hotel is expected to reopen in about 2 weeks.
OXFORD - The prolonged cold weather has caused many well pumps to freeze.
March 7
ANSONIA - A section of the retaining wall at the Wooster mansion (later Pine High School) on Clifton Avenue caves in.
March 8
DERBY - A new style Connecticut Company trolley car makes its first appearance in the City. It has 10 seats large enough to accommodate 2 people, and at each end are side seat that can accommodate more.
SEYMOUR - A 14-year old Humphreys Street girl dies of diphtheria.
SHELTON - 1906 Grand List for the Town of Huntington lists 965.5 houses, 86 stores or mills, 490 horses, 1031 cattle, and 356 carriages.
March 9
DERBY - The ticket agent at Sterling Opera House is often approached by foreigners wanting to pay taxes or obtain marriage licenses. They are confused over the fact that the City Hall offices are upstairs.
DERBY & SHELTON - There are concerns that the Huntington Bridge is unsafe.
SEYMOUR - J. H. Hale, owner of the extensive Hale peach orchards in town, fears that the state's peach crop may be completely ruined due to the mild start of winter which caused them to bud, followed by months of bitter cold weather.
SHELTON - The Shelton Water Company will lay a 12" main on Howe Avenue, from Wooster Street to Wharf Street. This will be its largest main yet, designed to help with fire protection and providing a better supply to the factories.
March 10
Just when everyone thought that the hard winter of 1906-1907 may be over, 5" of snow falls. The fact it fell on the 19th anniversary of the Blizzard of 1888 didn't help people's frustration.
ANSONIA - Landslide off 100' high bank at Central Avenue smashes into a wagon shed, nearly burying a delivery wagon inside.
Monday, March 11, 1907
DERBY - Gould Armory opens under the name Nickel Theater, showing continuous exhibit of motion pictures and illustrated songs every afternoon and evening. Admission is 5 cents, making it a true nickelodeon.
March 12
The Northern Lights are spectacular from midnight till 3 AM.
DERBY - The Evening Sentinel laments that although the ice on Lake Housatonic has not been thick enough for horse racing for many years until now, not nearly as many horses were racing on the course as last time.
March 14
SEYMOUR - Spring thaw making travel difficult.
March 15
St. Patrick's Day postcards are popular.
ANSONIA - Filth on Main Street Ansonia left over from the spring thaw looks "disreputable"
DERBY - Robins and bluebirds are spotted for the first time this year on Caroline Street.
DERBY - The Howard & Barber department store on Main Street now has a telephone intercom system, as well as 2 phone lines.
SEYMOUR - Complaint that children that living in diphtheria quarantined houses have been seen playing in the streets.
March 16
ANSONIA - The "Our Baby" nickel slot machine, seized in a raid at the Hotel Dayton on January 17, 1906, is finally ordered destroyed by the City Court. It is rumored that there is $75 in nickels inside. It actually yields 623 nickels, totaling $31.15, though it is unclear where the money should go.
DERBY - Ground broken for a six family apartment house on Fourth Street, near Caroline Street.
March 17
Many are out walking, or riding the trolley on this fine spring-like St. Patrick's Day, though many were surprised when they woke up to find a light snow fell overnight. Some churches had special services with Irish music, etc.
Monday, March 18, 1907
DERBY - The old fire whistle which was used for decades, at Alling's Mill, off First Street, has been taken down. It may eventually be used for something else.
March 19
DERBY - The Bassett House hotel reopens. Many from Derby, Ansonia, and Shelton are present at the open house.
March 20
Navigation reopened on Housatonic River, as it is clear of ice from the mouth to the Shelton Docks. The timing is perfect, as coal, which is normally barged up the river, is starting to be in short supply.
ANSONIA - Mayor Charters' mother, Bridget Charters, passes away at her Wakelee Avenue home.
ANSONIA - Practice of dumping refuse collected from street cleaning behind City Hall is generating complaints.
DERBY - Paugassett Hose (today's Pauguassett Hook & Ladder) Company will get a new 25'x40' brick two-story firehouse on Derby Avenue.
March 22
ANSONIA - The Salvation Army barracks on High Street is for sale, in the hopes that the proceeds can be used to relocate the barracks on Main Street.
March 23
The temperature rises to a high of 76 degrees.
The "ice goes out" on the Housatonic River, causing no damage. Any fears earlier in the month that there would be damaging freshet were dashed with the warm weather in the days prior causing the ice to melt rapidly. The entire river is now free of ice.
ANSONIA - The various German fraternal and benefit organizations of Derby and Ansonia form the United German Societies of Ansonia and Derby at Mannerchor hall.
March 24
The temperature drops to 28 degrees, a 48 degree difference from yesterday.
DERBY - William Peat's small lunchroom near the trolley carbarn on lower Main Street is broken into sometime between 3 and 5 AM. Finding no money, the thieves prepare themselves a breakfast of 18 eggs, 3 slices of ham, 3 hamburgers, and potatoes. Mr. Peat is getting a guard dog.
Monday, March 25, 1907
SEYMOUR - Frequent forest fires are breaking out in the hills around town. Some are caused by boys, others by sparks from passing trains.
March 26
DERBY - Robinson S. Hinman, who lives on River Road, offers to supervise rebuilding the road near the Pink house for free, providing city reimburse his material expenses. He is tired of complaints about the mud, and his oxen often have to pull wagons out that get stuck there.
SEYMOUR - Ground broken for the first house off Pearl Street near Arethusia Spring, in a new housing development called Broad View Heights.
March 26
SHELTON - The Grand List of the Borough of Shelton is 365 houses, 74 mills, 127 horses, 2 cattle, 131 carriages
March 27
The Johnny O' The Woods Fund is now up to $206.35
ANSONIA - 11 bodies were placed in the receiving vault of Pine Grove Cemetery over the winter season, waiting for the snow to melt. They are gradually being buried as the weather thaws.
ANSONIA - Bronze tablets are being put on the exterior of Ansonia National Bank. One tells of the bank's organization in 1865. The other will say the name of bank and announce that it has safety deposit vaults.
SEYMOUR - The Town announces the trolley company will replace its wood poles with steel poles in the business center.
SEYMOUR - There are currently 3 houses under quarantine in town - two are for measles, and 1 for diphtheria.
March 28
Automobiles have been reappearing, some have been rebuilt and repainted.
Many brush and field fires throughout the Valley.
Public schools close at 11 AM for Easter Recess, which will last until April 8.
The bakeries have hired extra help to make hot cross buns.
Fine displays of spring millinery on are on display at the Boston Store, Howard & Barber, and many other places.
DERBY - A large number of Derby High School boys are laying out 1/6 mile running track at Derby Meadows.
DERBY - The Street Commissioner has the Fire Department flush the block (cobblestone) pavement on Main Street and Elizabeth Street of winter dirt.
Good Friday, March 29
All mills are shut down for the holiday.
Open car trolleys make their first appearance of the year.
Many spend the day off hunting for better houses or rents.
Lawns are turning green in the fine weather.
DERBY - Bassett House prices are - $2.50 per day, 50 cents for all meals. $1 for just a room. 75 cents for Sunday dinners. Lower rates for 2 days or over, and terms for weekly board can be worked out.
DERBY - The J. N. Wise Bakery sells 30,000 hot cross buns.
SEYMOUR - Complaints that chickens are running loose in Trinity Cemetery.
SEYMOUR - The first baseball game of the season is played at Park Field, against two scrub teams. There are proposals to form a Valley baseball league.
March 30
ANSONIA - A boy runs into the almshouse near the Seymour border, and tells the supervisor of a forest fire at nearby Schuetzen Park. He and five other men rush to the scene, and barely manage to save nearby a house occupied by a hysterical woman and 4 small children.
ANSONIA - The Evening Sentinel is now a joint stock corporation
DERBY - Major Wilbur F. Osborne dies at his home at Osborndale Farm (today's Kellogg Homestead) on Hawthorne Avenue. See his obituary.
Easter Sunday, March 31
The weather is cloudy at dawn. Many go to church to enjoy fine sermons, music programs and floral decorations. Florists have been very busy. Snow begins before midnight and continues into the following morning.
April
Monday, April 1, 1907
Many April Fools jokes - some of the more popular ones involve putting bricks in paper bags for people to kick out of the way. Sawdust and cotton confectionary and loaded cigars are also popular.
SHELTON - Special meeting held in the Borough of Shelton, where it is voted to acquire a site and erect a new 8-room schoolhouse somewhere north of Bridge Street.
April 2
The temperature is 22 degrees at 6 AM, which is the coldest reading for this date since 1874.
SEYMOUR - A sick man at Trinity rectory has been diagnosed as having diphtheria, so the building is now under quarantine. Rev. Woodford has left the rectory, and is staying at a neighbor's house across the street.
April 4
DERBY - A large number of Sterling Piano employees walk off their jobs over a man's refusal to join the Piano Makers Union. He claims he cannot afford it.
April 5
DERBY - The Piano Makers Union walkout is over. The man who refused to join the Union will do so.
SHELTON - Shed being torn down at Whitlock Printing Press on Canal Street falls down prematurely, burying 4 men and injuring them.
April 6
The famed, aged wanderer who was originally from Derby, Johnny o' the Woods, has not been seen since the rescue fund was started for him in the Valley towns. It is feared that he may be avoiding area because he does not want to give up his wanderings
Kite flying and top spinning are popular pastimes right now.
DERBY - The Secor Typewriter, being manufactured at Williams Typewriter Company, is selling very well. The total orders for the machines are now around 9,000, enough to keep the plant busy for the next couple years at least.
April 7
ANSONIA - Mayor Charters joins a large delegation of "Slavs" holding a huge protest in Bridgeport against the treatment of Magyars in Hungary by the Habsburg government.
SEYMOUR - Fire destroys a duplex on Derby Avenue.
Monday, April 8, 1907
Mixed snow and hailstorm in the early morning.
April 9
DERBY - The Business Mens' Association of Ansonia, Derby, Shelton, and Seymour hold a banquet at the Bassett House, where they are addressed by Lt. Governor Everett Lake, the State Highway Commissioner, and the State Business Men's Association President.
SHELTON - The peach crop in White Hills is expected to be a failure due to the unseasonably warm weather, followed by bitter cold this year.
April 10
DERBY - Miss Frances Osborne is elected president of the Derby Neck Library Association, filling her late father Maj. Wilbur Fisk Osborne's seat.
SHELTON - The ancient Oronoque Paper Mill on the Far Mill River, near Pine Rock Park, is destroyed by fire.
April 11
ANSONIA - Rumors have been circulating this week, first that Hollbrook Street School, then all schools on the West Side, will close due to a diphtheria outbreak. These rumors are false. There are currently four houses under quarantine for various reasons on the West Side.
DERBY - Arctic explorer Robert E. Peary lectures at the Sterling Opera House before a large audience as a guest of the Pickwick Club, where he talks about his hopes of reaching the North Pole.
April 13
DERBY - Sterling Piano employees are surprised when it is announced that as of April 29 the factory will run 9 hours a day, but employees will still receive 10 hours pay.
SHELTON - Derby Gas Company is replacing its 4" gas mains on Howe Avenue with 6" gas mains, due to increased demand.
Monday, April 15, 1907
ANSONIA - The physicians of Ansonia, Derby, and Shelton meet at the Ansonia YMCA. Vote almost unanimously to increase their rates 50% - all charge the same.
DERBY - The Sterling Pin Company is adding a 80x40' addition to its Housatonic Avenue side. The addition will be 3 stories, along with a basement, adding 10,000' to the existing 12,000' the factory currently has. The firm began in October 1899 in Shelton, and makes hair pins, hooks and eyes, paper boxes, and novelties.
SHELTON - The Huntington Piano Company, like their parent corporation Sterling Piano in Derby, will reduce their hours from 10 to 9 per day, without reducing pay. Back then, the typical workweek included Saturdays, so it has gone down from 60 to 54 hours.
April 17
ANSONIA - The latest fad with Ansonia girls is "hair pillows", in which girls cut the hair of boys they like, and stick them into small souvenir pillows. The Sentinel warns that there may be an increase in the number of bald-headed boys shortly.
OXFORD - The grass is "as green as summer" on Oxford Green.
April 18
SHELTON - Shelton's jobs are outpacing its housing, because land values are so high. The Derby-Shelton bridge crowded with employees crossing at the start and end of the workday. The reason cited for this is land values are too high in Shelton.
April 19
ANSONIA - Two children die of diphtheria within 24 hours in the same Smith Street home.
OXFORD - Two older boys, allegedly from Naugatuck, interrupt class at Red Oak School. They begin by barging into the one-room schoolhouse and insult the teacher. When they tire of that, they go outside, and one begins shooting at the roof with a revolver, while the other pelts the school with stones. The children are terrified. Two boys risk their lives to run down the lane to a nearby farm house. The assailants chase the boys, until they find the farmer outside, at which point they turn and flee. No one is injured, though the town is in an uproar. The two boys are being sought, their identities are known.
SHELTON - The R.N. Bassett Company on Bridge Street will have another large addition - the second major one in 2 years.
April 20
SHELTON - The Bridgeport Hydraulic Company buys the water rights of the Far Mill River below Pine Rock Park from the Oronoque Paper Mill, though the mill retains its right of manufacturing and salvage of the machinery that survived last week's fire. BHC will keep the water supply as a reserve, for now
April 21
SEYMOUR - Seymour Congregational Church celebrates the 60th anniversary of the building of its present edifice.
Tuesday, April 23, 1907
The Evening Sentinel notes the surge in baby carriages seen outside, in a headline entitled "Sure Harbinger of Summer".
ANSONIA - Complaints about "foreign shopkeepers" keeping Sunday hours, which is against the. There are also complaints of gangs of beer drinkers in the Factory Street area.
DERBY & SHELTON - Boats and launches are being put into Housatonic River for the summer. Some are noting that the channel seems to have changed from last year, causing navigational difficulties that have even led to some boats running aground.
SEYMOUR - 10 year old boy killed instantly by a work train on the tracks off South Main Street.
SHELTON - The Ousatonic Water Company withdraws an offer of property on Union Avenue for a town school site, citing complaints from neighboring property owners.
April 24
OXFORD - The Town's Grand Juror is investigating the April 19 shooting at Red Oak School. Apparently this is not the first incident involving Naugatuck youths at isolated town schools, though it is the most serious. Such behaviors will no longer be tolerated, and the boys will be found and prosecuted.
April 25
ANSONIA - The Ansonia Floral Company has offered to distribute 1,000 geraniums to Ansonia, Derby, and Shelton students to decorate veteran graves this Memorial Day.
SEYMOUR - The Seymour High School senior class arrives home from their trip to Washington DC. While there, they had a few minutes audience with President Theodore Roosevelt on April 21, and all got to shake his hand. They described the tales of his firm, hearty handshake to be true, and had an overall positive impression of the popular President.
April 26
ANSONIA - No serious opposition at public hearing regarding the American Brass Company's request to close the sections of Tremont Street and Cheever Street, that are west of Canal Street, as ABC owns all the land on both sides of the streets, and wants to put coal bins there.
SEYMOUR - A teacher at Center School is sick with a severe case of diphtheria. The school is closed for rest of week and into next as it is completely fumigated.
SHELTON - The body of a man missing since March 30 is found in the Shelton Canal. It is uncertain if he drowned or was murdered.
April 27
DERBY - The building that until recently housed the Paugassett Hose Company firehouse on Derby is moving south to its new destination in front of the Mansion House on the same street.
DERBY & SHELTON - Huntington Bridge vibrates whenever anything crosses it, even dogs. It seems to vibrate worse with horses than trolleys. Even the wind causes the steel span over the Housatonic to vibrate, and some are afraid of its stability.
OXFORD - The Oxford constable and the Naugatuck Police Department arrest 2 Naugatuck youths in connection with the April 19 shooting at Red Oak School. According to the Sentinel, they're from "respectable families". They are brought to Oxford, where the youths subsequently plead in Town Court that they meant no harm, but that they were just having fun. The boys are heavily fined, and released.
Monday, April 29, 1907
DERBY - A large number of forest fires have residents calling for a fire warden to be appointed.
April 30
DERBY - Drivers are complaining that only a little water is trickling out of the memorial fountain on Seymour Avenue and Atwater Avenue, because the pipes are stopped up. This leaves little for horses to drink.
SHELTON - The factory of the Whitlock Printing Press will nearly double its size with a new addition. The 4 story building will cover the space between its current building and the Huntington Piano Company.
May
Wednesday, May 1, 1907
Today is the opening day of "Moving Season". Virtually every van and truck wagon in the Valley has been reserved for moving occupants from one apartment or house to another.
SHELTON - The Board of Education recommends naming the new school to be built "Isaac Hull School". The name is changed to "Commodore Hull School" before the end of the week.
May 2
SHELTON - 13 International Silver Company employees walk off the job for higher wages.
May 3
It has been unseasonably cold this May. The temperature drops to 36 degrees early this morning. Farmers and gardeners are in a state of despair.
SHELTON - The 50 acre J. C. Wakelee Farm, which reaches from the Housatonic River, to and across River Road, and further to and across Old Coram Road, is purchased by the Swedish Baptist Club of New York and Brooklyn. The farm will be utilized as a summer home and health resort for clergy, women, and children.
May 4
DERBY - The Sterling Opera House will be open 7 nights a week this summer, showing moving pictures and illustrated songs. This is a departure from previous years, where it was closed on Sundays. It is cited that other major theaters are remaining open on Sunday, and Sterling must do the same.
May 5
Temperatures down to 31 degrees early in the morning.
SHELTON - Ground broken in a ceremony for the new St. Joseph's Church, which will be 52' wide fronting Coram Avenue, and 108' long.
Monday, May 6, 1907
SHELTON - 600 people pack Clark's Hall to celebrate the first anniversary of the founding of St. Joseph's Parish, and the breaking of ground for the new church.
May 7
SEYMOUR - Town Hall's exterior appearance on Second Street is greatly improved, and now there is talk of beautifying the grounds.
May 8
ANSONIA - A "reserve hose house", which will utilize an old fire department hose cart, will be installed on the Nelson property on North Main Street to better protect the area.
May 9
DERBY - Governor Woodruff and his staff visits Derby to open a Spanish American War Veterans' fair at the Gould Armory, where he makes an address. Crowds cheer him as he proceeds from the railroad station to the Armory.
May 11
Snow falls in early morning, but does not stick.
ANSONIA - A smallpox case is discovered in a gypsy camp north of the Town Farm near the Seymour border. The entire camp is quarantined, with a 24 hour guard posted to keep anyone from entering or leaving.
ANSONIA - There are 19 automobiles registered in Ansonia. Only one person owns two. 5 are Packards. There are also two Pierce-Arrows and two Columbias. There is also one each of the following: Locomobile, Pope-Hartford, National, Peerless, Franklin, Reo, and Oldsmobile. Franklin Farrel has the only foreign car, a French made Rochet-Schnieder
May 12
The morning temperature is 30 degrees, causing frost conditions.
ANSONIA - The Frank A. Robbins circus arrives in Ansonia, and begins to unpack at Woodlot. $200 in tickets is stolen during the unloading.
DERBY - The planned Sunday shows at Sterling Opera House are cancelled, due to protests by the ministers of Derby Methodist, Second Congregational, and First Congregational churches
Monday, May 13, 1907
ANSONIA - The Frank A. Robbins circus continues at Woodlot. A man's pockets are picked of $400 there today.
ANSONIA - The gypsy infected with smallpox is removed from his camp and taken to the pest house on the town farm nearby.
May 14
SEYMOUR - The new trolley tracks on Main Street are completed, but have been covered with dirt so they will not be an inconvenience before they are ready to use.
May 15
Today is considered Straw Hat Day, when the temperature is normally considered warm enough to wear straw hats. There are many for sale in local stores, but few being bought because of unseasonable cold.
ANSONIA - The gypsy camp near the town arm is still quarantined and under 24 hour guard. People from throughout the Valley who came there recently to have their fortunes told are now afraid of contracting smallpox.
DERBY - Judge Downs announces anyone arrested for intoxication on Sunday in Derby will be sent to jail. Residents generally approve of this measure.
May 16
ANSONIA - The Maple Street Bridge will be reinforced with a dressing of crushed stone. Last fall's concrete was laid too late into the year, and is a bit soft.
ANSONIA - The State hive of Ladies of the Maccabees, which is an auxiliary of the Knights of the Maccabees, hold their annual convention at Ansonia Opera House. The City's hive was chartered on August 3, 1903, and numbers 33 members.
DERBY - Many of the Ladies of the Maccabees delegates are staying at Bassett House. They hold a banquet there this evening.
SHELTON - Pine Rock Park will open this summer. Roller skating and dancing will be the main attractions, and picnickers will be better catered this year
May 17
ANSONIA - The pest house now has a telephone. The doctor who is treating the gypsy infected with smallpox is grateful that he now has a means of communicating with the outside world.
ANSONIA- The Ladies of the Maccabees convention closes. This is the only day that the convention is open to the public.
DERBY - The trolley employees of the Consolidated Railway & Lighting Company employees form a labor union.
SEYMOUR - The new trolley bridge over Bladen's Brook is nearly completed.
SEYMOUR - Citizen Engine Company's Button steam fire engine returns with a new boiler from the Bigelow Company in New Haven.
SHELTON - The Shelton Trap Rock Quarry reopens.
SHELTON - The Wells Hollow Schoolhouse is overcrowded. It is 14'x16.5', 9' high, and houses 34 students.
Tuesday, May 21, 1907
150 area men of the Naugatuck Division of the New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad join the section men and work train hands from other divisions on strike, for a 10% increase in wages. The strike began in the main division yesterday.
ANSONIA - The quarantine is lifted at the gypsy camp on the edge of town. The gypsies immediately pack up and leave Ansonia, although the man who was infected with smallpox is still in the pest house, though his condition is improving. His wife is also has stayed in Ansonia to be with him.
ANSONIA - An auction is held for the assets and equipment of the defunct Omega Steel Company. One of the items up for auction includes the company's so called "$1 million secret" for making steel. Only gets one bid is received for the secret, for $25, which is refused.
SEYMOUR - A Boys' Brigade branch is formed in town. So far 38 have joined, and it is expected that 75 will join eventually. The organization is billed as a uniformed, paramilitary organization sponsored by Christian churches for "Christian manliness".
SEYMOUR - The weather is unseasonably cold. Snow squalls are reported in town today.
May 22
Temperatures just above freezing overnight and early this morning. A slight frost is reported in Seymour, Oxford, and the White Hills of Shelton.
DERBY - The landscaping at Derby Green, the Derby Public Library, and the new Derby High School on Minerva Street, are attracting much favorable attention
SEYMOUR - A band of striking railroad workers pass through Seymour, trying to induce other railroad workers to join them.
May 23
Area farmers disagree on the severity yesterday's late frost will have on crops, though all are concerned.
DERBY - There has been an increase in the number of females spotted driving automobiles, which at this time in history is considered an odd sight.
SHELTON - All union carpenters, plumbers, etc, walk off job at International Silver Company on Bridge Street, because they will not work with a gang of non union laborers who are whitewashing the interior of a new building on the factory complex.
May 24
DERBY - 100 striking railroad workers gather for a peaceful rally at Elks' Hall.
DERBY - Valvoline Oil Company will build oil tanks near the Derby Docks.
May 25
DERBY - The newly organized Housatonic Lumber Company has bought out the buildings and equipment of Carter & Hubbell lumber company, and will soon begin conducting a lumber business in Derby. 100 years later, they are still doing so.
SHELTON - The new Commodore Hull School will be 84'x66', 2 stories high, with outer walls composed of terra cotta blocks. It will have 2 large recreation rooms on the first floor, 1 each for boys and girls, and 4 classrooms on second floor.
May 26
DECORATION DAY
ANSONIA - The City holds evening memorial services in evening at Ansonia Opera House for Civil War dead.
DERBY & SHELTON - The cities hold joint Decoration Day exercises this evening at Sterling Opera House and the Civil War monument on Derby Green, sponsored by the Kellogg Post GAR, which serves both communities.
SEYMOUR - Upson Post GAR conducts memorial exercises at the Seymour Methodist Church.
SHELTON - Kellogg Post GAR holds memorial services this rainy afternoon on Huntington Green. It is noted that Spanish American War veterans participate in the ceremonies for the first time this year.
Monday, May 27, 1907
ANSONIA - A downpour causes the Naugatuck River to rise 6", and overwhelms city's drainage system. Beaver Brook almost overflows its banks. Many cellars are flooded, and several inches of water covers Jersey Street.
SEYMOUR - At 2:15 PM, Car No. 142, the first trolley car to travel on the new Seymour extension arrives at Main and Bank Streets.
May 28
ANSONIA - The mattress allegedly used by the gypsy smallpox patient wasn't fully burned along with the rest of the items he came into contact with, and has reportedly been left by the side of road. Feathers from the mattress are blowing around, alarming many.
ANSONIA - Railroad agents are reportedly combing the "foreign sections" of town, hiring strikebreakers. There is no end in sight to the railroad worker strike.
SEYMOUR - A freight car derails just south of the North Main Street bridge. The Sentinel reports "something is radically wrong with the tracks at that point".
SEYMOUR - The famed wanderer Johnny 'o the Woods, who has not been seen since early March, spent the night in the Seymour lockup.
SHELTON - The International Silver Company on Bridge Street is still on strike, even though the non-union whitewashing of its new building is nearly done. The union says its members won't return to work unless the union gets to whitewash the building, or if the amount that would have been paid to do the job is put into union's treasury.
May 29
Severe frost in the early morning.
ANSONIA - Johnny o' the Woods is reportedly heading towards Ansonia, where a charitable fund has been raised to pay for his care. Apparently not wishing to spend the remainder of his days on Ansonia's Town Farm, he seems to elude detection, as there is no mention of his whereabouts in the paper for the rest of the week.
ANSONIA - The gypsy smallpox patient has been discharged into the custody of his parents and wife. They are heading to New Jersey to rejoin their band. All bedding that came into contact with the patient has been destroyed, and the pest house has been disinfected.
SEYMOUR - 100 striking Italian railroad workers armed with clubs pass through town early in the morning. They later get into "serious trouble" in High Rock Grove in Beacon Falls.
May 30
ANSONIA - 5000 gather for the decorations at Pine Grove and St. Mary's Cemeteries. 2000 march in the city's first Memorial Day parade. The address is given by Rev. Mr. Blatz Jr., of Ansonia Methodist Church
DERBY - A baby carriage gets loose on Main Street near Minerva Street, and rolls down backward down the hill. It strikes a horse drawn truck, but the driver stops the horses before the impact to avoid crushing it. The carriage topples, but a pillow falls under the baby, saving his life.
DERBY & SHELTON - Fine weather for the Memorial Day parade. The parade stops in Oak Cliff Cemetery, and the Civil War monument on Derby Green, where Gen. Charles Pine gives a stirring address.
SEYMOUR - The Memorial Day parade goes from Second Street up Bank Street to Central School. 300 schoolchildren march in the parade carrying small flags, all the way to the Spruce Street soldier's monument. Rev W. H. Kidd of New Haven gives the address.
May 31
DERBY - The R. M. Bassett Hook & Ladder Company has had its firehouse on the Fourth Street side of the Sterling Opera House renovated.
June
Saturday, June 1, 1907
SHELTON - Many new homes are being erected in the North End of downtown.
June 2
DERBY & ANSONIA - A meeting at St. Mary's Church to organize care for the St. Mary's cemeteries is largely attended.
Monday, June 3, 1907
ANSONIA - A new New England Order of Protection lodge is formed.
ANSONIA - The city's expenses to care for the recent gypsy smallpox case cost $395. The physician, Dr. Sanford's expenses alone were $225.
ANSONIA & DERBY - Stephen Tracy, of 223 Elizabeth Street, Derby, reveals to the Ansonia Board of Charities that he had sheltered the locally famous, elderly wanderer Johnny o' the Woods in his barn behind St. Mary's Church. He told Johnny in March he had to chose to go to Town Farm, where many Valley residents had contributed a large fund to pay for his care, or leave. Johnny did chose to leave, but returned few days ago. He absolutely does not want to live on the Town Farm (a.k.a. Poorhouse).
DERBY - Double tracking of the trolley line has begun. The pavement is torn up on lower Main Street.
June 4
ANSONIA - Ice slips out the back of an ice wagon on Main Street. Half of the thoroughfare is blocked, from the curb to the trolley tracks, with several hundred pounds of ice.
DERBY - The Derby Lodge, BPOE votes to lease the upper 2 floors of the B.J. McManus building on Elizabeth Street, starting about September 1.
SEYMOUR - The first trolley car to travel between Seymour and Naugatuck makes its inaugural run this afternoon. The trolley was loaded with officials from both towns, as well as Beacon Falls (which is along the way), and Waterbury (which is now connected to Seymour via Naugatuck. The large closed car, #261, leaves at 3:54. It encounters a bit of trouble in Beacon Falls when it slips off the track but it is quickly put back on. The trolley left later than scheduled, and that combined with the minor derailment along the way led to a great amount of apprehension when it was late arriving in Seymour. The crowd that gathered to see the first trolley arrive was relieved when it came into sight at Main Street and Bank Street at 5:00 PM.
June 5
OXFORD - "The village green has been clipped and is looking very nice. The center never looked prettier than at the present time. The houses' frontings on the green have all been put in order for the season, and look very neat and trim".
SHELTON - Frequent dynamiting is occurring at the Shelton Trap Rock quarry.
June 6
ANSONIA - The large 18 to 20 room house and spacious grounds of Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Wallace on North Cliff Street sold to Church of the Assumption. It fronts 90' of both North Cliff Street and North Main Street. The Church would later convert the house into a convent, and it burned down just prior to the first Flood of 1955.
ANSONIA - An Imperial Japanese Navy Lieutenant is in the city to inspect work being done at Farrel Foundry and Machine Company for his government. The factory is making castings for turbine engines, which will be used for navy cruisers being built in Fall River.
DERBY - Boaters who moor near the Derby Docks are upset that thieves who they call 'dock rats' are stealing articles from their boats. This includes draining tanks of gasoline. They vow to catch them.
June 7
DERBY & SHELTON - Several launch owners in Derby and Shelton plan to attend the Jamestown Exposition, by boating down there.
June 8
DERBY - Construction on the new St. Michael's Church is expected to be complete by July 4.
SEYMOUR - A 16 year old local boy is killed when he struck just above the heart with a fastball while at bat during a baseball game, in front of a large crowd of people.
June 9
SHELTON - A large dog goes on rampage in White Hills. It starts by attacking 2 cows and a horse at one farm, then attacks an ox at another. Moving to a third farm, it kills 2 ducks at another. People are in an uproar. Many arm themselves and search for the animal. The dog is killed by Tracy McEwen
Wednesday, June 12, 1907
ANSONIA - Bridge Street shopkeepers want their street to receive the same level of maintenance and cleaning that Main Street does.
DERBY - The Board of Aldermen is again debating the question of whether to start leaving streetlights on all night.
DERBY & SHELTON - Bass are dying off in Lake Housatonic. No one is sure why.
OXFORD - A large room in the basement of the Episcopal Rectory has been made into a meeting room for socials in the community.
June 13
ANSONIA - Many are violating the law that says all bicycles and rubber-tired vehicles must have at least one lantern lit at night.
SEYMOUR - The macadam road under the Maple Street viaduct is nearly completed. The road, unofficially called "the subway", will hopefully no longer be known by its other nickname, the "mud-way".
June 14
ANSONIA - The 22 members of the Ansonia High School Class of 1907 are awarded their diplomas at the Ansonia Opera House.
DERBY - The 11 members of the Derby High School Class of 1907 are awarded their diplomas at the Sterling Opera House.
SEYMOUR - The 8 members of the Seymour High School Class of 1907 are awarded their diplomas at the High School.
June 15
ANSONIA - 17 members of the High School graduating class accept an invitation to take a trip up the Housatonic River in F. B. Westmore's launch "Bessie J".
SHELTON - Howe Avenue barber George Gade's ice water fountain is very popular this time of year.
Monday, June 17, 1907
DERBY - People in are upset that there are piles of peanut shells and fruit skins on and around nearly every bench on the Green, left over from the weekend.
DERBY - Two Lafayette Street brothers, ages 7 and 5, are playing with high explosives they found on Anson Street. The explosives go off, apparently when the 7 year old was hitting it with a rock. He is killed instantly. His 5 year old brother is horribly mangled. Accounts vary as to exactly what happened.
June 18
Barefoot boys and girls are appearing on the streets again, a sure sign of summer. Icemen are warned to be careful, as the children try to get behind the wagons to get chips of ice to cool themselves.
SHELTON - Much of the foundation of the new St. Joseph's Church on Coram Avenue has been laid.
June 19
Farmers have complained for years about how dust kicked up by automobiles ruins their crops. Now there are so many autos on the road, the drivers themselves are complaining that driving on the roads is like "taking a dust bath".
OXFORD - "The temperature of the last few days has made it safe to let the fires go out for the first time this season. It now gives promise to the other extreme, too warm to be comfortable. The ground is becoming very dry and dusty and a good rain would be welcome".
SHELTON - The Shelton High School Class of 1907 has its graduation exercises at the Sterling Opera House in Derby.
June 20
Foul odors are starting to come from backyard garbage heaps
June 21
ANSONIA - A boy is struck while darting out from behind an ice wagon. He suffers minor injuries.
ANSONIA - Improvements have been completed at the Methodist Episcopal Church on Main Street. The entire front lot has been transformed, and it now has pleasing landscape.
DERBY - 75 acres, on the west side of Seymour Avenue, between Hawkins Street and Division Street, are being developed into building lots.
June 22
DERBY - A public telephone has finally been installed in the waiting room of the Derby Train Station.
SHELTON - The newly completed Church of the Good Shepherd is consecrated by Bishop C.E. Brewster in a big ceremony on Coram Avenue.
June 23
ANSONIA - The Church of the Assumption, which has been under construction for many years, is dedicated by Bishop Tierney in front of a huge crowd on North Cliff Street. The church is still not considered completed as of this time, as the steeple has not been built. (The steeple would never be added).
Monday, June 24, 1907
SEYMOUR - Four machinists employed by Fowler Nail Company are on strike over their hours. This is the only unionized factory in Seymour.
June 25
Fireworks are appearing in local stores. The law says they can not be set off before 4 AM on the Fourth of July.
SHELTON - The Naugatuck Valley Motor Boat Club holds first meeting in its new clubhouse
June 26
An afternoon shower breaks the heat wave of the last few days, dropping the temperatures dramatically. By 6 AM the following morning, the temperatures have gone from 92 to 60 degrees.
ANSONIA - The first wedding is held at the new Church of the Assumption, when Teresa A. Darrigan of Ansonia weds Patrick J. Boland of Derby.
OXFORD - "There is not the slightest doubt but that summer temperature is with us now, and it seems perfectly safe to shut up the coal bin for the summer. Can anyone be found who does not sound a note of rejoicing?"
June 27
There have been 19 weddings in the Valley in three days. All but one of the brides are local.
DERBY - A contest is being held to name the new subdivision off Seymour Avenue. It is open to all Derby, Shelton, and Ansonia children, and the prize is $25.
DERBY - Boaters are complaining about "naked" men bathing below the Derby Docks. Whether they are actually nude or simply not wearing "appropriate clothing", which back then covered the neck to the knees, is unclear.
June 28
SHELTON - A 21 pound turtle is captured in the Shelton Canal.
June 29
SEYMOUR - The Dayton House, also known as the William Hull house, has been moved from its old location to a new foundation further south on the same lot, and is being made into a two family tenement.
SEYMOUR - The old Humphreys Mill, one of Seymour's most ancient landmarks, is rapidly being torn down. It will be replaced by a concrete structure to be occupied by the H. P.& E. Day Company. Many are taking old nails as souvenirs.
SHELTON - A serious fire breaks out at the Derby Rubber Reclaiming Company on Canal Street after midnight. The pouring rain hampered both the fire's ability to spread and the firemen's ability to put it out.
SHELTON - The factories are very busy, despite the fact this is normally a dull period of the year. The Shelton Canal will be drained next week, as it is annually, and the factories normally give their employees their summer vacations at that time. But this year some factories are only giving 3 day summer vacations, the absolute minimum, for their shutdowns.
July
Tuesday, July 2, 1907
ANSONIA - 15 local meat dealers, who primarily cater to Slovak and Russian immigrants, sign an agreement that they will no longer extend credit to people who rent in boarding houses. They say they have lost thousands every year on that segment of the population.
DERBY & SHELTON - Many are camping in tents along the banks of the Housatonic River.
July 3
OXFORD - "There is one remarkable feature of the season that we have not seen mentioned heretofore and it is the entire absense from apple trees of the worm nests. So far we have failed to notice one on any trees in the village".
July 4 - INDEPENDENCE DAY
ANSONIA - The City has a rough Independence Day. Many fireworks are set off. The Ansonia Congregational Church is broken into early in the morning so the bell could be rung in the early morning. The Baptist Church is also broken into at that time for the same reason with a ladder. Both churches are damaged. Guards thwart attempts to break into Christ Church and the Methodist Church. Many fireworks are set off. There are some arrests and injuries throughout the day. Vandalism occurs on Main Street. Ansonia - some arrests & injuries. Many fireworks. Congregational Church broken into to ring bell, Baptist Church with ladder. The entire police department is on duty, but officers can't be everywhere at once.