Local History Photos & Newspaper: February 27, 2026

Hi everyone, here are the local history photos & vintage newspaper of the week.

Local History Photo 1: Parade on Market Street

Local History Photo 2: The Old Evening Leader Building

Local History Photo 3:Pine Street Square and Clocktower (later Centerway Square)

A Glimpse of Local Life: A Hundred Years Ago!

Here is an entire issue of The Evening Leader, Corning, N.Y. published on this day in 1926.

The Evening Leader, Corning, N.Y. | February 27, 1926

Have a great weekend everyone,

Linda Reimer, SSCL

Local History Online Library Resources:

Heritage Quest: Heritage Quest is the library’s online genealogy service, and it includes access to census records and other research sources; it can be accessed by going to the Online Resources page, on the library’s website, and scrolling down until you see the link for Heritage Quest:

https://www.ssclibrary.org/research/online-resources/

Once you’ve clicked on the Heritage Quest link, you’ll be prompted to login with your card number and PIN. If you have questions about how to use Heritage Quest, please feel free to let me know – my email address is reimerl@stls.org

Library Local History/Creation Station Resources:
At the library you can scan your photos and slides to create digital family albums and slideshows; and even use one of the Circut machines, and other Creation Station equipment, to help you create a special paper family history album.

Also of note, we have local papers including the Corning Leader, Corning Evening Leader, Corning Journal and Corning Daily Journal, on microfilm from 1840 to the present — so you can visit the library and research local history and your family tree if you wish!

Local History & Newspaper blog posts are published on Fridays.

Historical Pictorial Coloring Book Program is Cancelled

Hi everyone, unfortunately the Historical Pictorial Coloring Book Program with artist & illustrator Fritz Wasser, which was scheduled for tomorrow, Thursday, February 26, 2026, is cancelled. Mr. Wasser is unexpectedly unavailable tomorrow. We hope to reschedule the program for a later date.

The Historical Pictorial Coloring Book is a really cool book; it was of course, illustrated by Mr. Wasser and the text was written by Thomas Dimitroff and Lois Janes. The oversized book features seventeen double-page illustrations with a description of the history of each historical location or building being shown.

Highlights include:

Lumber Rafting On The Chemung River

The Castle, Corning’s Arsenal

Early 20th Century View Of The Corning Glass Works

Steuben Glass Works Sixteen-Pot Furnace

Corning Becomes A Community And Builds A City Hall

And

Centerway Square: The Heart Of The Community

I urge you to check out the book. The library has copies you can peruse and you can also purchase copies for $10 at the Heritage Village of the Southern Finger Lakes gift shop.

Additionally, if anyone would like to stop by the library and pick up some photocopies pages to color – let me know and I’ll give you a packet.

Have a great day,

Linda Reimer, SSCL

Local History Photos & Newspaper: February 20, 2026

Hi everyone, here are the local history photos & vintage newspaper of the week.

Local History Photos of the Week

This week our photos are all Library of Congress photos that show the old Erie Railway Station in Corning before and during a remodel; as well as two photos showing Erie railroad tracks heading out of the city on the southside.

And for a closer look at where the old Erie Railway Station was, on the corner of Pine and Erie Avenue, now Denison Parkway; check out this 1903 Sanborn Insurance Map:

A Glimpse of Local Life: A Hundred Years Ago!

Here is an entire issue of The Evening Leader, Corning, N.Y. published on this day in 1926.

The Evening Leader, Corning, N.Y. | February 20, 1926

Have a great weekend everyone,

Linda Reimer, SSCL

Local History Online Library Resources:

Heritage Quest: Heritage Quest is the library’s online genealogy service, and it includes access to census records and other research sources; it can be accessed by going to the Online Resources page, on the library’s website, and scrolling down until you see the link for Heritage Quest:

https://www.ssclibrary.org/research/online-resources/

Once you’ve clicked on the Heritage Quest link, you’ll be prompted to login with your card number and PIN. If you have questions about how to use Heritage Quest, please feel free to let me know – my email address is reimerl@stls.org

Library Local History/Creation Station Resources:
At the library you can scan your photos and slides to create digital family albums and slideshows; and even use one of the Circut machines, and other Creation Station equipment, to help you create a special paper family history album.

Also of note, we have local papers including the Corning Leader, Corning Evening Leader, Corning Journal and Corning Daily Journal, on microfilm from 1840 to the present — so you can visit the library and research local history and your family tree if you wish!

Local History & Newspaper blog posts are published on Fridays.

Local History Discussion Group January 2026 Notes

Our Local History Discussion Group met at the library on Thursday, January 15 and had a fun general conversation about local history including a few topics that were discussed in more depth and they are:

First up, the library’s Local History Discussion group meets on the third Thursday of the month from 3:00 – 4:00 p.m. 

The February 2026 Local History Discussion group gathering will be on Thursday, February 19, 2026.  

And onto the General discussion topics (from our January gathering) 

1. The purpose of this group: The purpose of the Local History Discussion Group is to talk about local history! With a side order, that is only if anyone is interested (no pressure); if anyone is interested he or she can research and put on a local history program at the library; or suggest one the staff can put on.  

2. The next local history display, named Notable Locals, volume 3, is almost ready to go up. The display will have a complimentary newsletter that patrons can take and read, digitally, or via a print copy. 

Our third batch of Notable Locals, celebrates some of the remarkable people, places, and organizations that helped shape the character and legacy of the Corning region; includes renaissance sportsman, coach, youth mentor, and historian John Driggins, whose lifelong dedication to athletics, community and local history has influenced generations. Also featured is Crystal Eastman, a nationally significant suffragette, reformer and legal scholar with local roots, and Rose Backus Ecker, founder of the Corning Clionian Circle and a driving force in the city’s civic and cultural life. 

The list also includes transformative institutions. The Erie Canal stands out as a feat of engineering that created a water highway between Albany and Buffalo, forever altering New York’s economic and social landscape. Industrial history & innovation is represented by Amory Houghton Sr. (1813–1882), whose decision to relocate the Brooklyn Flint Glass Works to Corning laid the foundation for what would later become Corning Glass Works, one of the city’s defining enterprises. 

Military service and postwar entrepreneurship are embodied by Captain Charles Rubright, who fought in numerous Civil War battles, endured captivity at Andersonville, and later returned to help build the local economy by founding the Corning Brick & Terra Cotta Works. The region’s deeper history is represented by the Seneca People (Onöndowa’ga’), Keepers of the Western Door of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy, whose traditional lands encompassed much of the Genesee River Valley. 

And rounding out the group is Colonel Henry Tuthill, a Civil War officer who commanded the Elmira Prison Camp—often referred to as “Hellmira,” later serving as commander of President Abraham Lincoln’s honor guard as he lay in state; and after the war became a renowned architect. Together, these Notable Locals offer a powerful reminder of the many threads—civic, industrial, military, and Indigenous—that weave together the story of our region.  

3. The history of public libraries in Corning: The first public library in Corning, was a subscription library that was, according to the book, A History of the public libraries served by the Southern Tier Library System, was organized on February 25, 1873; more research should be done & compiling a history of the public libraries in Corning was agreed to be a good idea.  

Please feel free to drop by one of our monthly local history gatherings, or if you prefer, comment and share information by replying to this post.

Have a great day,

Linda Reimer

Southeast Steuben County Library

Local History Photos & Newspaper February 13, 2026

Hi everyone, here are the local history photos & vintage newspaper of the week.

Local History Photo 1: Pine Street Looking North, Corning, N.Y.

Local History Photo 2: Overhead Bridge & Seventh Ward, Corning, N.Y.

Local History Photo 3:Centerway Bridge, Corning, N.Y.

A Glimpse of Local Life: A Hundred Years Ago!

Here is an entire issue of The Evening Leader, Corning, N.Y. published on this day in 1926.

The Evening Leader, Corning, N.Y. | February 13, 1926

Have a great weekend everyone,

Linda Reimer, SSCL

Local History Online Library Resources:

Heritage Quest: Heritage Quest is the library’s online genealogy service, and it includes access to census records and other research sources; it can be accessed by going to the Online Resources page, on the library’s website, and scrolling down until you see the link for Heritage Quest:

https://www.ssclibrary.org/research/online-resources/

Once you’ve clicked on the Heritage Quest link, you’ll be prompted to login with your card number and PIN. If you have questions about how to use Heritage Quest, please feel free to let me know – my email address is reimerl@stls.org

Library Local History/Creation Station Resources:
At the library you can scan your photos and slides to create digital family albums and slideshows; and even use one of the Circut machines, and other Creation Station equipment, to help you create a special paper family history album.

Also of note, we have local papers including the Corning Leader, Corning Evening Leader, Corning Journal and Corning Daily Journal, on microfilm from 1840 to the present — so you can visit the library and research local history and your family tree if you wish!

Local History & Newspaper blog posts are published on Fridays.

Local History Photos & Newspaper: February 6, 2026

Hi everyone, here are the local history photos & vintage newspaper of the week.

Local History Photo 1: Corning Fire Department (November 1917)

Local History Photo 2: The Corning Glass Works

Local History Photo 3: Market Street in Corning

A Glimpse of Local Life: A Hundred Years Ago!

Here is an entire issue of The Evening Leader, Corning, N.Y. published on this day in 1926.

The Evening Leader, Corning, N.Y. | February 6, 1926

Have a great weekend everyone,

Linda Reimer, SSCL

Local History Online Library Resources:

Heritage Quest: Heritage Quest is the library’s online genealogy service, and it includes access to census records and other research sources; it can be accessed by going to the Online Resources page, on the library’s website, and scrolling down until you see the link for Heritage Quest:

https://www.ssclibrary.org/research/online-resources/

Once you’ve clicked on the Heritage Quest link, you’ll be prompted to login with your card number and PIN. If you have questions about how to use Heritage Quest, please feel free to let me know – my email address is reimerl@stls.org

Library Local History/Creation Station Resources:
At the library you can scan your photos and slides to create digital family albums and slideshows; and even use one of the Circut machines, and other Creation Station equipment, to help you create a special paper family history album.

Also of note, we have local papers including the Corning Leader, Corning Evening Leader, Corning Journal and Corning Daily Journal, on microfilm from 1840 to the present — so you can visit the library and research local history and your family tree if you wish!

Local History & Newspaper blog posts are published on Fridays.