batavia https://www.thebatavian.com/ en https://www.thebatavian.com/themes/barrio_batavian/images/thebatavian_logo.png batavia https://www.thebatavian.com/ Local Matters © 2008-2023 The Batavian. All Rights Reserved. Tue, 23 Apr 2024 10:11:01 -0400 https://www.thebatavian.com/themes/barrio_batavian/images/thebatavian_logo.png Tue, 23 Apr 2024 07:54:00 -0400 Police station project manager explains need for space around construction site https://www.thebatavian.com/howard-owens/police-station-project-manager-explains-need-for-space-around-construction-site/639120  

changes_to_our_parking_policy_2.jpeg
A graphic released on April 11 by the City of Batavia showed what city officials believed at the time would be the available parking at Bank and Alva during the construction of the new police station.  Late last week, officials revealed that the entire parking lot north of Alva Place will be fenced off during construction.

The local press was not permitted in a meeting on Monday between business owners concerned about impacts on their shops during the construction of a new police station in Batavia, but afterward, the project manager spoke exclusively with The Batavian about what he tried to communicate during the

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https://www.thebatavian.com/howard-owens/police-station-project-manager-explains-need-for-space-around-construction-site/639120#comments https://www.thebatavian.com/howard-owens/police-station-project-manager-explains-need-for-space-around-construction-site/639120 Apr 23, 2024, 7:54am batavia Police station project manager explains need for space around construction site Howard Owens <p>&nbsp;</p><figure role="group" class="caption caption-div"> <div> <div class="field field--name-field-media-image field--type-image field--label-hidden field__item"> <img alt="changes_to_our_parking_policy_2.jpeg" class="image-style-large" height="634" loading="lazy" src="https://www.thebatavian.com/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/2024-04/changes_to_our_parking_policy_2.jpeg?itok=tYxGacX6" width="748"> </div> </div> <figcaption><em>A graphic released on April 11 by the City of Batavia showed what city officials believed at the time would be the available parking at Bank and Alva during the construction of the new police station. &nbsp;Late last week, officials revealed that the entire parking lot north of Alva Place will be fenced off during construction.</em></figcaption> </figure> <p>The local press was not permitted in a meeting on Monday between business owners concerned about impacts on their shops during the construction of a new police station in Batavia, but afterward, the project manager spoke exclusively with The Batavian about what he tried to communicate during the</p>
Placement of construction fence for new police station draws complaints https://www.thebatavian.com/howard-owens/placement-of-construction-fence-for-new-police-station-draws-complaints/639115
police station contruction
Photo by Howard Owens

On Monday morning, workers moved a construction fence off the sidewalk behind a group of office buildings on Washington Avenue, Batavia, that was erected late last week in preparation for the start of construction of the new Batavia police station.

Dr. Tom Mazurkiewicz said he and other businesses in the complex were upset with the placement of the fence and even just moving it off the sidewalk isn't good enough.

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https://www.thebatavian.com/howard-owens/placement-of-construction-fence-for-new-police-station-draws-complaints/639115#comments https://www.thebatavian.com/howard-owens/placement-of-construction-fence-for-new-police-station-draws-complaints/639115 Apr 22, 2024, 2:29pm batavia Placement of construction fence for new police station draws complaints Howard Owens <figure role="group" class="caption caption-div"> <div> <div class="field field--name-field-media-image field--type-image field--label-hidden field__item"> <img alt="police station contruction" class="image-style-large" height="532" loading="lazy" src="https://www.thebatavian.com/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/2024-04/alva-washington-parking-lot-fence-2-construction.jpg?itok=Tp6eCxmo" width="800"> </div> </div> <figcaption><em>Photo by Howard Owens</em></figcaption> </figure> <p>On Monday morning, workers moved a construction fence off the sidewalk behind a group of office buildings on Washington Avenue, Batavia, that was erected late last week in preparation for the start of construction of the new Batavia police station.</p><p>Dr. Tom Mazurkiewicz said he and other businesses in the complex were upset with the placement of the fence and even just moving it off the sidewalk isn't good enough.</p>
HLOM mini-exhibit 'St. Joseph's Drum Corps: 53 years later' https://www.thebatavian.com/press-release/hlom-mini-exhibit-st-josephs-drum-corps-53-years-later/639105 Press Release:

Come by the Holland Land Office Museum and check out our new mini-exhibit, "St. Joesph's Drum Core: 53 Years Later!"

From April to the end of September, view photographs, uniforms, and other artifacts relating to the nationally ranked local drum corps from the twentieth century!

Beginning in 1931 under the direction of Rev. T. Bernard Kelly, pastor of St. Joseph's Church in Batavia, the St. Joseph's Drum Corps was created and went on to be nationally ranked. Winning 8 New York State American Legion titles and other national titles! The drum crops were active until 1971. However, they have a reunion corps called the "Mighty St. Joe's" in Le Roy.

The exhibit includes uniforms, photographs, instruments, and much more of members of alumni of the Drum Corps.

The mini-exhibit is available during regular museum hours, Tuesday-Saturday 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. with regular admission. Come and check it out on your next visit to the Holland Land Office Museum.

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https://www.thebatavian.com/press-release/hlom-mini-exhibit-st-josephs-drum-corps-53-years-later/639105#comments https://www.thebatavian.com/press-release/hlom-mini-exhibit-st-josephs-drum-corps-53-years-later/639105 Apr 22, 2024, 7:48am batavia HLOM mini-exhibit 'St. Joseph's Drum Corps: 53 years later' Press Release <p>Press Release:</p><blockquote><p>Come by the Holland Land Office Museum and check out our new mini-exhibit, "St. Joesph's Drum Core: 53 Years Later!"</p><p>From April to the end of September, view photographs, uniforms, and other artifacts relating to the nationally ranked local drum corps from the twentieth century!</p><p>Beginning in 1931</p></blockquote>
Column: Memories of Making Bread https://www.thebatavian.com/anne-marie-starowitz/column-memories-of-making-bread/639110
bread oven hlom
Photo courtesy the Holland Land Office Museum.

Today, making bread is easy. You buy a loaf of frozen bread, defrost it, and bake it. In 1996, there was a machine called the Bread Machine. You would put all the ingredients into the machine and turn it on. It would mix the ingredients, time the bread to rise, and then bake the bread. Now, you can go to a supermarket and buy fresh bread.

In the ‘60s, my grandmother, Jennie Bellow, would bring her homemade bread to Batavia every Sunday. We all enjoyed her bread and took it for granted. On one of my Sunday sleepovers in Le Roy, I watched my grandma get out all sorts of things to make her white bread. Flour, yeast, and Crisco were some of her ingredients. She also took out a flat piece of wood, a towel, and five bread pans. I asked why she was getting everything out the night before, and she said I would find out the following day. 

Jennie Bellow
Jennie Bellow

Early the next morning, I watched her make her bread. I had no idea it would take all day. First, we would measure the flour, put the yeast in warm milk, and add one scant wooden spoonful of Crisco. We would mix the ingredients by hand, which is called kneading. The towel was to cover the dough, hoping it would rise. Finally, the bread was ready for the pans. The result was beautiful but so time-consuming. My grandmother was born in 1900, and making bread was a way of life for women in the 1900s as it was in the 1800s.

One of the first things Joseph Ellicott did as a local agent of the Holland Land Company was to have mills, both grist and saw, built in Batavia to encourage settlement. Before the erection of the gristmill in Batavia in 1804, the people sometimes did not have bread or anything to make it from. Flour was brought on packhorses before the roads were of such a character as to allow better transportation. The Tonawanda Creek dam was used to power a sawmill and, a little later, a gristmill.

Both corn and wheat grain had to be ground for bread and other foods. The grindstones at the gristmill reduced corn to meal and wheat grain to flour. “Rye and Indian,” made from cornmeal and rye flour, was the only bread the early settlers could make. Grinding the grain into flour for the pioneers meant a journey to the gristmill by ox sled in both summer and winter.

I wonder if the giant stone doughnuts that stood on East Main Street near the corner of Ross Street could have been gristmill stones. Many years ago, they were at the entrance of a burned house. I can remember them always being there; after the fire, they disappeared.

In the Holland Land Office Museum, there is a colonial kitchen. You can imagine our early settlers cooking in the kitchen using a fireplace. Upon request, you can view a reflector oven. This was one way the early settlers made bread. A reflector oven is a box usually made of tin designed to enclose an article of food on all but one side to cause it to bake by capturing radiant heat from an open fire and reflecting the heat toward the food. The next time you buy freshly baked bread at your local supermarket, think of the time it took to make bread from “scratch!”

I treasure the memories of cooking and baking with my grandmother. I know how to make her bread from scratch, but it is not the same not having my grandmother next to me in her cobbler apron showing me how to knead the bread.

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https://www.thebatavian.com/anne-marie-starowitz/column-memories-of-making-bread/639110#comments https://www.thebatavian.com/anne-marie-starowitz/column-memories-of-making-bread/639110 Apr 22, 2024, 7:30am batavia Column: Memories of Making Bread Anne Marie Starowitz <figure role="group" class="caption caption-div"> <div> <div class="field field--name-field-media-image field--type-image field--label-hidden field__item"> <img alt="bread oven hlom" class="image-style-large" height="600" loading="lazy" src="https://www.thebatavian.com/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/2024-04/img_2329hlom-bread-oven.jpg?itok=kUQKGdBu" width="800"> </div> </div> <figcaption><em>Photo courtesy the Holland Land Office Museum.</em></figcaption> </figure> <p class="text-align-justify"><span>Today, making bread is easy. You buy a loaf of frozen bread, defrost it, and bake it. In 1996, there was a machine called the Bread Machine. You would put all the ingredients into the machine and turn it on. It would mix the ingredients, time the bread to</span></p>
Former Batavia resident Terry Anderson, journalist taken hostage by terrorists in 1985 dies at age 76 https://www.thebatavian.com/howard-owens/former-batavia-resident-terry-anderson-journalist-taken-hostage-by-terrorists-in-1985
terry anderson and jim owen
Terry Anderson, right, autographs a book for the late James Owen at an event at Batavia Downs commemorating the opening of the International Peace Garden in Batavia in February 2011.
File photo by Howard Owens.

Terry Anderson, a journalist and a Batavia High School graduate who gained international attention after being taken hostage by an Iranian-backed terrorist group, has died in Greenwood Lake, in the Hudson Valley.

He was 76 years old.

Anderson was the Beirut bureau chief in 1985 for the Associated Press when he was kidnapped by armed men who dragged him from his car after he dropped off a tennis partner following a match. The pistol-wielding men yanked him from his car and pushed him into a Mercedes-Benz.

The terrorists were reportedly members of Hezbollah, an Islamic Jihad Organization in Lebanon. He was reportedly blindfolded and beaten and kept in chains and moved to 20 different hideaways in Beirut, South Lebanon, and the Bekaa Valley.

His release came 2,454 days later following intense lobbying by his sister, Peggy Say.

Anderson and Say were born in Lorain, Ohio, where their father, Glen, was a village police officer. While still children, their parents moved to Batavia, where their father worked as a truck driver and their mother, Lily, was a waitress.

After Anderson was kidnapped, Say didn't feel the case was getting enough attention from the U.S. government and the United States. She launched a national campaign to raise the awareness of people to the plight of her brother and other hostages held by Hezbollah.

Say, who had returned to Batavia after relocating for a time, enlisted fellow journalists, humanitarian groups, world figures, and U.S. citizens in the cause, which led to the nation being festooned with yellow ribbons. 

She also received assistance from many fellow Batavia residents, such as Anne Zickl, who died in 2014.

Say died in 2015 at age 74.

Terry Anderson's daughter Sulome told the New York Times that Anderson died following complications from a recent heart surgery.

Anderson's last public appearance in Batavia was in February 2011 to dedicate the International Peace Garden.

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https://www.thebatavian.com/howard-owens/former-batavia-resident-terry-anderson-journalist-taken-hostage-by-terrorists-in-1985#comments https://www.thebatavian.com/howard-owens/former-batavia-resident-terry-anderson-journalist-taken-hostage-by-terrorists-in-1985 Apr 21, 2024, 9:45pm batavia Former Batavia resident Terry Anderson, journalist taken hostage by terrorists in 1985 dies at age 76 Howard Owens <figure role="group" class="caption caption-div"> <div> <div class="field field--name-field-media-image field--type-image field--label-hidden field__item"> <img alt="terry anderson and jim owen" class="image-style-large" height="531" loading="lazy" src="https://www.thebatavian.com/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/2024-04/terry-anderson-and-jim-owen.jpg?itok=LluNEnLh" width="800"> </div> </div> <figcaption><em>Terry Anderson, right, autographs a book for the late James Owen at an event at Batavia Downs commemorating the opening of the International Peace Garden in Batavia in February 2011.</em><br><em>File photo by Howard Owens.</em></figcaption> </figure> <p>Terry Anderson, a journalist and a Batavia High School graduate who gained international attention after being taken hostage by an Iranian-backed terrorist group, has died in Greenwood Lake, in the Hudson Valley.</p><p>He was 76 years old.</p><p>Anderson was the Beirut bureau chief in 1985 for the Associated Press</p>
State budget includes tax credit that addresses crisis in local news https://www.thebatavian.com/press-release/state-budget-includes-tax-credit-that-addresses-crisis-in-local-news/639108 Press release:

Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature unveiled the final state budget Saturday, including a payroll tax credit for local news outlets, modeled on the Local Journalism Sustainability Act, in the sweeping package. With the passage of this bill, New York is now the first state in the nation to incentivize hiring and retaining local journalists. This game changer for the local news industry comes just months after the launch of the Empire State Local News Coalition, an unprecedented, grassroots campaign powered by more than 200 community newspapers across the state.

Senator Brad Hoylman-Sigal, the Senate bill sponsor, said: “I’m elated that our first-in-the-nation Local Journalism Sustainability Act is passing in the state budget. A thriving local news industry is vital to the health of our democracy and it’s our responsibility to help ensure New Yorkers have access to independent and community-focused journalism. Thank you to Senate Majority Leader Stewart-Cousins, Governor Hochul, our Assembly Sponsor Woerner and the over 200 local publications of the Empire State Local News Coalition who helped pass our bill. Our efforts will help ensure that our democracy will not die in darkness.”

"Without local news coverage in our community, there would be a lot that our local governments do that voters would never know about nor have any way to realistically question; there would be no accountability," said Howard Owens, publisher of The Batavian.  "We created Early Access Pass to give the community an opportunity to support local journalism and help us hire more reporters. This tax credit will help those dollars, along with our vital sponsor support, go further, and should open the door for us to hire more reporters, which is the legislation's primary purpose. We're hopeful this legislation will help ensure Genesee County continues to get the local news coverage it needs and deserves.

"I also want to thank our local representatives, Assemblyman Steve Hawley and Sen. George Borrello, for their support of this critical piece of legislation," Owens added. "They both recognize the importance of local news coverage to our community and understand the crisis state the local news industry is in."

The program--$30 million per year for three years--allows each eligible newspaper and broadcast business to receive a 50% refundable tax credit against the first $50,000 of an employee's salary, up to a total of $300,000 per business. $4 million will be allocated to incentivize print and broadcast businesses to hire new journalists. The remaining $26 million will be split evenly between businesses with fewer than 100 employees and those with more than 100 employees, ensuring that hyperlocal, independent news organizations can access these funds. 

After stalling for years, the Local Journalism Sustainability Act catapulted into a top legislative priority this session following the early-2024 founding of the Empire State Local News Coalition and the coalition’s mobilization of support from hundreds of New York hometown papers as well as a broad range stakeholders from around the country, including the Rebuild Local News Coalition, Microsoft, and El Diario. Organized labor, including NYS AFL-CIO, CWA District 1, and national and local news guilds, also played a critical role in mobilizing support for this historic bill. 

"The Empire State Local News Coalition is thrilled by the state budget’s inclusion of a payroll tax credit for local news outlets modeled on the Local Journalism Sustainability Act. New York is now the first state in the nation to incentivize hiring and retaining local journalists–a critical investment given that hundreds of New York’s newspapers have closed since 2004, leaving too many New York communities without access to vital local information. The objectivity of this credit shows that there is a fair way for public policy to support local news without jeopardizing journalistic integrity. This program is a model for other states across the U.S. to follow as communities across the country raise their voices to save local news,” said Zachary Richner, founder of the Empire State Local News Coalition.

“We’re incredibly proud of the 200 newspapers in our coalition, which built an unprecedented grassroots movement in support of saving New York’s local news industry in a few short months. We’re especially grateful to Senator Brad Hoylman-Sigal, whose tireless advocacy for this tax credit was instrumental in moving it through the legislative process. The coalition thanks Governor Hochul, Majority Leader Stewart-Cousins, Speaker Heastie, Assembly Sponsor Carrie Woerner, and the entire legislature for supporting this industry-saving policy, and we look forward to continuing our advocacy for local news in the years to come," Richner continued. “Other states and stakeholders interested in replicating this playbook and hearing about lessons learned should reach out to us at info@savenylocalnews.com.”

Since launching in February, the coalition has quickly mobilized stakeholders across the state to rally behind the bill. In addition to rallying with grassroots advocates in Westchester and Albany, members led petition drives, letter-writing campaigns, editorials, and advertisements, sounding the alarm on the decline of local journalism.   

New York’s leadership on this issue could change the course of local journalism in the U.S. The budget’s inclusion of this tax credit comes at a watershed moment for the journalism industry: New York State has experienced hundreds of newspaper closures in the past few decades. 

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https://www.thebatavian.com/press-release/state-budget-includes-tax-credit-that-addresses-crisis-in-local-news/639108#comments https://www.thebatavian.com/press-release/state-budget-includes-tax-credit-that-addresses-crisis-in-local-news/639108 Apr 21, 2024, 6:45pm batavia State budget includes tax credit that addresses crisis in local news Press Release <p>Press release:</p><blockquote><p dir="ltr">Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature unveiled the final state budget Saturday, including a payroll tax credit for local news outlets, modeled on the Local Journalism Sustainability Act, in the sweeping package. With the passage of this bill, New York is now the first state</p></blockquote>
Youth Conference brings networking, support and information to kids, most from Genesee County https://www.thebatavian.com/jfbeck99272012/youth-conference-brings-networking-support-and-information-to-kids-most-from-genesee
Suicide Prevention workshop
Katelyn Zufall, second from right, of the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, leads a suicide prevention workshop during the Rainbow Resilience youth conference Friday at Genesee Community College in Batavia. Makenzie Rich, a Batavia High School junior seated to Zufall's left, said the day was

Makenzie Rich was one of more than 70 middle and high school students to attend Friday’s Rainbow Resilience Youth Conference in an effort to not only gain more information and understanding about mental health and potential suicide issues as part of the LBGTQ community but also to help others struggling with similar issues, she says.

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https://www.thebatavian.com/jfbeck99272012/youth-conference-brings-networking-support-and-information-to-kids-most-from-genesee#comments https://www.thebatavian.com/jfbeck99272012/youth-conference-brings-networking-support-and-information-to-kids-most-from-genesee Apr 20, 2024, 8:02am batavia Youth Conference brings networking, support and information to kids, most from Genesee County jfbeck_99_272012 <figure role="group" class="caption caption-div"> <div> <div class="field field--name-field-media-image field--type-image field--label-hidden field__item"> <img alt="Suicide Prevention workshop" class="image-style-large" height="476" loading="lazy" src="https://www.thebatavian.com/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/2024-04/suicide-prevention-workshop.jpg?itok=VfjHHqJ_" width="800"> </div> </div> <figcaption><em>Katelyn Zufall, second from right, of the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, leads a suicide prevention workshop during the Rainbow Resilience youth conference Friday at Genesee Community College in Batavia. Makenzie Rich, a Batavia High School junior seated to Zufall's left, said the day was </em></figcaption> </figure> <p>Makenzie Rich was one of more than 70 middle and high school students to attend Friday’s Rainbow Resilience Youth Conference in an effort to not only gain more information and understanding about mental health and potential suicide issues as part of the LBGTQ community but also to help others struggling with similar issues, she says.</p>
Photo: My Cut Barbershop named Downtown Business of the Year https://www.thebatavian.com/howard-owens/photo-my-cut-barbershop-named-downtown-business-of-the-year/639097
my cut barbershop BID award business of the year
The team at My Cut Barbershop -- Terry Smith, Connor Hyde Hamilton, Victor Thomas, Ray Williams, Zach Watts, owner, and Josh Johnson.
Photo by Howard Owens.

At Thursday's annual meeting of the Business Improvement District at Center Street Smokehouse in Batavia, My Cut Barbershop was honored as business of the year and Sara Tenney was named the BID's volunteer of the year.

My Cut is located on the first floor of the Masonic Temple building, 200 E. Main St., Batavia.

bid award
Sara Tenney, volunteer of the year, with BID director Shannon Maute.
Photo by Howard Owens
my cut footwear
The My Cut crew and BID director Shannon Maute show off their footwear for the evening's event.
Photo by Howard Owens.
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https://www.thebatavian.com/howard-owens/photo-my-cut-barbershop-named-downtown-business-of-the-year/639097#comments https://www.thebatavian.com/howard-owens/photo-my-cut-barbershop-named-downtown-business-of-the-year/639097 Apr 19, 2024, 2:20pm batavia Photo: My Cut Barbershop named Downtown Business of the Year Howard Owens <figure role="group" class="caption caption-div"> <div> <div class="field field--name-field-media-image field--type-image field--label-hidden field__item"> <img alt="my cut barbershop BID award business of the year" class="image-style-large" height="535" loading="lazy" src="https://www.thebatavian.com/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/2024-04/bid-awards-2.jpg?itok=MEm-cVZc" width="800"> </div> </div> <figcaption><em>The team at My Cut Barbershop -- Terry Smith, Connor Hyde Hamilton, Victor Thomas, Ray Williams, Zach Watts, owner, and Josh Johnson.</em><br><em>Photo by Howard Owens.</em></figcaption> </figure> <p>At Thursday's annual meeting of the Business Improvement District at Center Street Smokehouse in Batavia, My Cut Barbershop was honored as business of the year and Sara Tenney was named the BID's volunteer of the year.</p><p>My Cut is located on the first floor of the Masonic Temple building</p>
Vehicle reportedly hits building on Ellicott Street Road, Batavia https://www.thebatavian.com/howard-owens/vehicle-reportedly-hits-building-on-ellicott-street-road-batavia/639092
truck into building accident

Minor injuries are reported after a vehicle struck a building at 4814 Ellicott Street Road, Batavia.

The location is Brach Machine.

The vehicle is reportedly elevated on a bollard.

Town of Batavia Fire and Mercy EMS dispatched.

UPDATE:  A 28-year-old man may have suffered a medical issue while driving on Ellicott Street Road when he lost control of his pickup truck, according to Deputy Jeremy McClellan. He sustained an apparent shoulder injury and was transported to UMMC for evaluation and treatment. McClellan said a code enforcement officer responded to the scene and determined the building remains structurally sound.

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https://www.thebatavian.com/howard-owens/vehicle-reportedly-hits-building-on-ellicott-street-road-batavia/639092#comments https://www.thebatavian.com/howard-owens/vehicle-reportedly-hits-building-on-ellicott-street-road-batavia/639092 Apr 19, 2024, 8:10am batavia Vehicle reportedly hits building on Ellicott Street Road, Batavia Howard Owens <div> <div class="field field--name-field-media-image field--type-image field--label-hidden field__item"> <img loading="lazy" src="https://www.thebatavian.com/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/2024-04/barch-machine-accient-2024.jpg?itok=jeK_E4wc" width="800" height="532" alt="truck into building accident" class="image-style-large"> </div> </div> <p>Minor injuries are reported after a vehicle struck a building at 4814 Ellicott Street Road, Batavia.</p><p>The location is Brach Machine.</p><p>The vehicle is reportedly elevated on a bollard.</p><p>Town of Batavia Fire and Mercy EMS dispatched.</p><p>UPDATE: &nbsp;A 28-year-old man may have suffered a medical issue while driving</p>
Navigating the Tonawanda: historic floods in Batavia https://www.thebatavian.com/ryan-duffy/navigating-the-tonawanda-historic-floods-in-batavia/639016
creek-road-1942-flood04-12-2024-103515-1.jpg
Photo of Creek Road during the 1942 flood.

Anyone who has lived in our area for any length of time, especially along the Tonawanda Creek, knows that the waters can be unpredictable at times. We only have to look back just a few weeks for another example. There have been many instances when its flow has overreached the banks of the creek and invaded the surrounding properties. The most extensive of these floods in Batavia occurred 80 years ago during a spring thaw.

Batavia has seen many high flood waters in its history. In 1887, there was a flood called at the time “the greatest flood Batavia has seen in years,” and in 1902 the waters damaged the Walnut Street bridge, in what was called a “record breaker,” and even the flood of 1959 caused considerable hardship. 

However, in March 1942 it would see its greatest flood in its history. That March there was still a good deal of snow on the ground of the city. In typical Western New York fashion, a large snowstorm came through on March 15, added to the white coverage. Yet, on the following day, the temperatures rose quickly and the snow changed to rain. 

The precipitation caused much of the snow drifts to begin to melt, especially in the hills near Attica and along the tributaries of the Tonawanda. The creek soon flooded as water poured in Alexander and filled the low areas that bordered the creek. One particular area that was hit hard was the streets south of Ellicott Street in Batavia. 

Water-filled streets like Jackson, Swan, Hutchins, and Otis. As the water flowed under the Walnut Street bridge, then still open to vehicular traffic, it spread to West Main Street and to the northern side streets. 

Many of the residents of those streets were forced to evacuate their homes as the waters continued to rise, and many sought out friends or relatives living in higher points in the city. 

The Red Cross stepped in to assist and helped 225 families find safe and dry lodgings. Those without another place to go were given shelter at the YMCA and school buildings that were unaffected. The only effective means of travel along many of the streets of Batavia, looking more like the canals of Venice, Italy, were boats and canoes and other forms of watercraft. 

Most homes had cellars full of water, and in some worse cases, the waters reached the first floors. The people living in the flooded areas could not return home for several days, but when they did return they were met with severe damage to their homes and properties. 

In the end, the Tonawanda Creek crested at 14 ½ feet, the highest in history. In total, nearly $500,000 in damage was caused.

The 1942 flood, among others, caused the city to strongly look towards how to better manage the waters of the Tonawanda to prevent a similar deluge. Flood control improvements were authorized in 1948 within the Flood Control Act passed by Congress. 

The improvements were completed by late 1955. Some of the improvements included: widening the creek to upwards of 100 feet, adding a retaining wall, clearing the channel, extra bank protection in suspectable areas, and improvement of existing drainage systems.

kibbe-park-1942-flood04-12-2024-103724-1.jpg
Photo of Kibbe Park during the 1942 flood.
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Photo of Law Street during the 1942 flood. 
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Photo of Ellicott Street during the 1942 flood.
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Photo of Ellicott Street and Swan Street during the 1942 flood.
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Photo of Sacred Heart Church during the 1942 flood.
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Photo of the interior of Sacred Heart Church during the 1942 flood.
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Photo of Main Street and Oak Street during the 1942 flood.
tonawanda-creek-dam-1942-flood04-12-2024-103547-1.jpg
Photo of the Tonawanda Creek Dam during the 1942 flood.
walnut-street-1942-flood04-12-2024-103328-1.jpg
Photo of Walnut Street during the 1942 flood.
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https://www.thebatavian.com/ryan-duffy/navigating-the-tonawanda-historic-floods-in-batavia/639016#comments https://www.thebatavian.com/ryan-duffy/navigating-the-tonawanda-historic-floods-in-batavia/639016 Apr 19, 2024, 8:05am batavia Navigating the Tonawanda: historic floods in Batavia Ryan Duffy <figure role="group" class="caption caption-div"> <div> <div class="field field--name-field-media-image field--type-image field--label-hidden field__item"> <img alt="creek-road-1942-flood04-12-2024-103515-1.jpg" class="image-style-large" height="525" loading="lazy" src="https://www.thebatavian.com/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/2024-04/creek-road-1942-flood04-12-2024-103515-1.jpg?itok=j2vHG4SB" width="800"> </div> </div> <figcaption>Photo of Creek Road during the 1942 flood.</figcaption> </figure> <p>Anyone who has lived in our area for any length of time, especially along the Tonawanda Creek, knows that the waters can be unpredictable at times. We only have to look back just a few weeks for another example. There have been many instances when its flow has overreached</p>