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Marist College Land History: Marist Land East of Route Nine

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Marist Land east of Route Nine
This section begins with the 1881 purchase of the land by George A Bech, son of Edward and
Elizabeth McCarty Bech.
It moves then to the 1907 sale of the land by court order to Christian Bahret, who designed a
combination industrial/residential area and called it Fairview.
Then we look at the years when Marist College acquired parcels for current use, including art
education, residential, maintenance, parking, even tennis courts.

Directory
Bech ownership era (1881 - 1907)
Establishment of Fairview district (1907 - 1979)
MidHudson Mall parcel

between Fulton Street and Winslow Farm
Western Printing and Lithographing Company
Housing and light industry along route nine
Steel Plant Studios
Kem Plastic Playing Cards Co
Other small industries
Private housing along route nine
Further acquisitions by Marist College (1979 - )
Postscript


Bech Ownership era (1881 - 1907)
George Albert Bech (1856 - 1890), the son of Edward and Elizabeth McCarty Bech, purchased
372 acres east of route nine for $38,000.
See note one.
On the north the land was
bounded by the John Winslow farm, at the east by Violet Avenue, and on the south by West
Cedar Avenue.
George also owned a farm in Stockbridge Massachusetts called Edgehill, inherited by his widow
Julia. He did a limited amount of farming on the Poughkeepsie purchase, as evidenced in
agricultural census records.
After George died in 1890, the land was added to the original Bech land holdings. When his
mother, Elizabeth McCarty Bech, died in 1900, she left the entire estate to her granddaughter,
Pauline E Von Nauerdorff. The case was complicated because most of the persons of interest






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in the will resided in Europe,
There must have been a long civil case of Pauline E Von
Nauerdorff vs: Marie Elizabeth Countess VonLinden, Carl Von
Linden, her husband, Sophia Marguerite Von Oxholm, Charles
Von Oxholm, her husband, Josephine E Von Pauer, Leon Von
Pauer, her husband, Julia M Babcock, William Babcock,
George Von Nauerdorff (Pauline’s husband) Emily M F Braem
(widow of Henry M Braem),Emily M F Braem and William
Bridge, executors of the will of Henri M Braem. The judge
seems to have resolved and terminated this civil lawsuit by ordering the sale of the
property.

The land east of the Hyde Park Road was sold 15 May 1907 to Christian Bahret for
$18,850 by court order.
See note 2
There is a legend within the Marist Brothers that Brother Zephiriny became aware of the
availability of the George Bech parcel when Brother was looking for a site for the provincial
house and Novitiate in 1904. As of this writing, we have been unable to document this
legend.
See note 3
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Establishment of Fairview district (1907 - 1979)
Until completion of the route nine section bypassing central
Poughkeepsie, the road system near the Marist Property was
different. Route nine went through downtown Poughkeepsie
and followed Washington Avenue out of the city. Washington
Avenue connected to Delafield Street just south of the Bech
Gatehouse. At that time the edges of the Brothers' property
were bordered by Delafield Street at the south and North
Road (Washington Ave) to the north.
Map No 713 of the North Road section of the Fairview District shows Delafield and seems to be
crossing North Road until it reaches Fulton Street. The strip of road across the road marked
Delafield was called Beck Place (or Bech Place, as the spelling ought to be consistent with the
Bech family). Deeds refer to both Bech and Beck.
Development of the MidHudson Mall parcel
This is the 18 acre parcel bounded on the North by the former Winslow Farm, on the east by
the railroad originally laid out and owned by the Poughkeepsie & Eastern RR (which railroad
was developed by John Winslow), on the south by Fulton Street, and on the west by the North
Road (or on some maps the Albany Post Road). Although Marist College does not own any
property, the College history is entwined with former occupants. It is the northwest section of
the land once owned by George A Bech. It's most notable tenant was Western Printing and
Lithographing Co (name changed to Western Publishing Company in 1960 when the company
sold shares to the public.)
Fiat Automotive Company was incorporated in the US in 1908
and manufactured autos in Poughkeepsie from 1910 to
1918. In 1919 the Duesenburg Auto Company purchased the
building, but did not manufacture cars in Poughkeepsie. It
moved all the machinery from Poughkeepsie to other
Duesenburg plants.
Duesenburg earned a reputation for powerful cars, winning many races. Ownership of a
Duesenburg became a status symbol, especially among the movie set on the West Coast. In


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1919 the New York Times
carried an article indicating
that Duesenburg had sold
the Poughkeepsie plant and
land to Willys, which soon
after became known as
Willys-Overland Co.
Although Willys was the
second largest national
producer of automobiles in the 1920s and 1930s (second to
Ford Motor Company) Willys did not manufacture autos in Poughkeepsie. Its ownership is listed
on the county records as through Electric Auto-Lite Company, a subsidiary.

It is not known if Electric Auto-Lite used the plant during its
four year tenure(1922 to 1926). To most of us, Willys is
known as the company which made the Jeep famous, selling
over 500,000 jeeps to the US Government for use during
World War II. In 1928 the plant was sold to Lancia Motors of
America, but Lancia failed in 1931. In 1934 the plant was
purchased by Edward H Wadewitz, of Racine Wisconsin, who
turned it over 19 January 1935 to Western Printing and
Lithographic Company.
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Western Printing and Lithographing Company
Edward Henry Wadewitz and his brother Albert H Wadewitz are credited with founding Western
Printing and Lithographing Company in 1907 when they purchased the West Side Printing Co
of Racine Wisconsin for $2,504. The company experienced rapid growth, publishing such items
as the Betty Crocker loose-leaf cookbooks, the Golden Books, and a variety of toys. The
headquarters remained in Racine, but Western established printing facilities in Hannibal
Missouri and Poughkeepsie New York. The Poughkeepsie operation lasted until 1985, when
Western closed its plants in Poughkeepsie and Hannibal, taking a $7 million write off for
disposal of the Poughkeepsie site.
A small chunk of the 18 acre site lay the northwest corner. It had been purchased by Tempa
Dyruff for use as parking space for the Woodcliff Pleasure Park on the former Winslow estate
west of route 9. Western purchased this lot in 1946 and eventually built a cafeteria- meeting
space in a separate building on that site.. See
Note A6
for details of the deeds relating to
MidHudson Mall.
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Housing and light industry along route nine
The area south of Fulton Street to the end of the Bech holdings between route nine and the
railroad was used for private housing and some light industry. The presence of automotive may
have induced several companies to locate as suppliers, notably Liberty Starters Company and
Permalife Company. The most often remembered by old timers was Shatz Manufacturing
Company/Federal Bearings Company a major supplier to Ford Motor Company until the end of
the 1960s. But there was no connection between FIAT and Shatz, as Shatz became dominant
shortly before World War II. Shatz has downsized but maintains a presence along Fairview
Avenue; it specializes in high precision ball bearings.


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Steel Plant Studios
The Steel Plant Studios are
housed in the former steel
fabrication plant pieced
together by Martin Kurkhill
and Morris B. May via three
purchases. In the early
1980s Morris May sold his
share of the properties to
Martin Kurkhill, and in 1984
Martin Kurkhill and his wife
Sylvia sold the property to
Marist College. The building
remained unimproved for
about thirteen years,
serving only as storage.
The college realized that the
plant would be in the middle
of the eventual campus, but
did not have the funds to
remodel and renovate the
space until 1987. When the
route nine highway was
expanded from one to two lanes both northbound and southbound the state had agreed to
construct a brick wall on the side facing route nine; later the college extended the wall to its
current length. The rugged construction and high ceilings form a charming setting for the
art courses, exhibits, and socials sponsored by the college art department. See
note A7
for
details.
When the college was looking for an appropriate site for the
Cannavino Library, the most likely spot was the site of the
then current library. This meant that the current library had
to be demolished, and a temporary location for the library be
located. At first the thought was to create a closed stack
library in the vacant steel plant, but it soon became apparent
that the steel plant had sufficient space to create an open
stack library with all the amenities of the then current library
available. One argument against using the steel plant was its
location east of route nine; this became moot when it
became apparent that half the resident students lived east of
route nine. The steel plant served this important function at
Marist College for two years: 1997-1999.
Meanwhile the art department located in several places. In
1984 the art department operated in some space in Donnelly (as did the Fashion Program)
currently occupied by the computer stations accessible to students. When that space was
reserved for the computer operation, the art program was relocated to Marist East (located in
rented space in the former Western Publishing Company building across the street). Fashion
was also relocated to its current rooms at the north entrance to Donnelly. When the lease on
Marist East expired, the art program was moved into Donnelly in classroom space adjacent to
Fashion. When the Cannavino Library opened, the steel plant became available. Art moved to
that location in 1999, and Fashion expanded into the Donnelly classrooms which had been
used by the art program.
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Kem Plastic Playing Cards Co
In 1946, Kem Plastic Playing Cards Co purchased the 27 acre
Winslow estate between the Hudson River and route 9 from
Runk Realty Corp. Shortly thereafter, it negotiated with
Western Printing and Lithographing for the purchase of a
building just behind the Steel Plant Studio situated along the
Poughkeepsie & Eastern tracks. The building encroached on
the right of way of the railroad, which preserved its rights to
the affected land by charging $10 per year rent to the
building owners. In its expansion years, Western had
established a division called Western Playing Card Company
that was active in the 1920s, but ceased operation sometime
in the early 1940s. A division of Western Playing Card
Company may have been located in the building, and
Western reserved the right to store items in part of the
building.
See note A8
for details.
Kem relocated to Mattituck NY (P O Box 33 zip 11950) on
the north fork of Long Island. It was purchased in 2004 by
United States Playing Card Company, which in turn became a subsidiary of Jarden. Kem sells
plastic cards made of cellulose acetate so they are washable and durable. They are difficult to
duplicate. This makes them the favorite for casinos, gaming rooms, and card rooms. They are
available to individuals via the Internet at prices ranging from $35 to $65 per deck.
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Other small industries
When F.I.A.T. built the large plant opposite the Marist Brothers, it attracted other industries,
many of which were suppliers to F.I.A.T. or which sold products related to the automotive
industry. Among these were:
Permalife Storage Battery (map 1166) Permalife had patented a method of connecting the
electrodes to the battery and keeping the battery sealed, as well as a method to place the
electrodes within the battery which provided superior power. A 1917 journal included the
following news item: "Frederick Wright, one of the best known men in storage battery circles,
has become connected with the Permalife Storage Battery Company of Poughkeepsie New
York, and will have direct supervision of the manufacture of Permalife batteries in the modern
plant recently acquired through the consolidation of Permalife with W. L. Battery Company of
Poughkeepsie."
Soap Co (map 1166) was located just south of Fulton Street. It had a patent on a particular
composition for soap, and may have had contracts to supply FIAT with that soap.,.
Liberty Starters Company (map 1166) purchased a site in Fairview early in 1919 to
manufacture electric starters, using battery power to supplement the hand crank system used
in the early years of the automotive industry. Liberty developed a motor which could be
cranked by hand or started using power from a battery. It adjusted this to starting the motors
of small aircraft, again either by manually turning the propeller or by using power from a
battery. By July 1921, Liberty Starter Co was in receivership (see deed 11 July 1921 liber 416
page 341)
Reliance Aniline & Chemical Co had large holdings just south of Fulton Street (see map
1166). Prior to World War I, Germany was the leader in the manufacture of coal tar products
for dyes and other uses. When this supply was cut off, a number of smaller USA companies
entered the field, including Reliance, whose headquarters were in New York City but


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manufacturing plant was in Poughkeepsie NY. A Google search limited to the 1919-1925 time
period shows Congress being urged to protect these small startups as Germany again
reentered the USA market; The aniline & dye companies asked for tariff protection. See
Note
B6
for details on both Liberty and Reliance

New York Portable Bungalow (map 713) manufactured kits for erection of one or two car
garages. It branched out into larger structure kits and is cited in several Google searches
(including one for Forestry published by Syracuse University) for its proficiencies in millwork.
New York Portable Bungalow does not appear on map 1166, so it either moved or went out of
business.
The planners of Fairview reserved most of the land near North Road for industry, and the
sections east up to Violet Avenue as residential. Some of the other industries once part of the
Fairview area are listed below.
With the loss of industries the Fairview area tax was based on residential properties. This
resulted in a heavier burden on the individual residents. To compound the problem, the district
includes several not for profit institutions, including Marist College, which by law are tax free.
In particular, the Fairview Fire District includes Marist College, Dutchess Community College,
the Children's Home, and Saint Francis Hospital, all of whom use the Fire District. Marist has
voluntarily paid a significant amount in lieu of taxes, but not every non-profit is in a position to
do the same.
Knauss Brothers slaughterhouse was located just north of Fulton Street, with space east of
Gulf Refining Company occupied in 2013 by warehouses at 51 and 57 Fulton Street. William
Knauss was born in Germany in 1870, emigrated to
Poughkeepsie NY in 1984 and became a butcher. As early as
1901, the Knauss brothers operated a butcher store at 139
Union Street in the city of Poughkeepsie (139 is now a
parking lot betwen private homes).
In 1901 a refrigeration journal published a notice: "It is
claimed that Knauss Bros., the butchers at Poughkeepsie, N.
Y., have established there the first plant for manufacturing
ice in that city. The plant was started in operation last month,
and is used mainly to refrigerate their meat rooms."
In 1920 he decided to open a slaughterhouse to guarantee
the shop a supply of pig and beef meats. He purchased land
on the north side of Fulton Street ( the site of the
warehouses at 51 and 57 Fulton Street). His home address in
the 1930 and 1940 federal censuses was listed as 4 West
Cedar Street.
Shortly after opening the slaughterhouse (or abattoir) nearby
residents complained about the odors and contamination of
wells. The New York State Department investigated the
matter and made recommendations. (
Click here
to see the Health Department report.)
Apparently the major complainant was the superintendent of the Hudson River State Hospital.
The report limits itself to conditions east of the Albany Post Road. The Marist Brothers on the
west side of the Post Road also suffered contamination, and asked Coudert Brothers, a leading
law firm specializing in international law, to represent the Brothers in this matter. Brother
Zephiriny was well connected with Coudert: Frederick Coudert, head of the firm, acted as the
trustee for his sister Louise Merrilon, when she lent the Brothers funds to purchase the Bech


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When the Fairview area was developed after 1910, William Knauss became very involved,
acting at the agent for Fairview Improvement Company for many years.
Estate, and John Murray, a member of the Coudert firm, acted for the Brothers on many
occasions.
Apparently the remediation was successful. The Brothers continued to use Knauss Brothers
slaughterhouse for handling of beef and larger animals. Slaughter of pigs was still conducted
by the Brothers themselves. In 1946-1947, Brian Desilets was the cook for the Provincial
House which also was the location of the scholasticate dining room. One of his tasks was to
dress the meat from the slaughtered pig and prepare it for shipment to the Novitiate kitchen at
the south end of the property.
In 1960 Knauss Brothers arranged to lease space in their
building to Seneca Packing Company (See cross hatching on
map 2949
) . This arrangement was short lived, ending in
1972 when the building and grounds were transferred to
Irving Schlossberg in a bankruptcy action. The six acre
property eventually was broken up into three sections. The
JC Paper Company is at the eastern section of the Knauss
Parcel on property now owned by Landslide Enterprises. The
middle parcel containing warehousing space was owned by
Dutchess County and was sold in 2013 to Marist Real
Property Services; it will be used to consolidate storage and
maintenance facilities. At the edge of the Marist parcel there is an easement (running next to
Star Gas) leading to a third parcel occupied by Eastern Metals Recycling but owned by R.
Freedman & Son Inc. See
Note B13
for further information.


Star Gas Company, Inc. When I looked at the flat
outlines of the Knauss slaughter house property, there
seemed to be a little sliver of land at the west which ought to
have completed the triangle for Knauss Brothers formed by
Fulton Street and two railroad lines making up the other two
sides. The Star Gas parcel still exists in 2014, but was never
part of the Knauss property. Fairview Improvement Company
sold the parcel to Gulf Refining Company of Port Arthur, TX in
1913, seven years before Knauss assembled his package for
the slaughterhouse. When I viewed the levels of both properties, the Star Gas Property has a
400 foot side alongside the railroad which originally was the Poughkeepsie & Eastern, that by
the beginning of the 20th century serviced several commercial establishments. The purchase
made sense for Gulf Refining that could download Texas oil from railroad cars into storage and
then distribute it in small portions to its service stations because Fulton Street was close to
route nine. Duso Chemical Company was a distributor that among others clients serviced the
Marist Brothers who operated a laundry servicing their Poughkeepsie and Esopus operations.
With the growth of motor transport capability and the demise of the railroad, the use of
propane has increased in the mid Hudson area. See
Note B14
for details.
Ike Katzowitz founded Star Gas in 1947. In 1975 Richard and Hermine Muellerleile
purchased the business. .The Muellerleile family and the Star Gas Products, Inc. staff proudly
continue to provide propane to a service area that has expanded to 4 counties .
Hamilton Reproductions was a printing company at the corner of West Cedar Street and
North Avenue. Leon Bloom owned the business. He was involved with many local business
organizations. In the early 1970s he was the President of the Poughkeepsie Area chamber of


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Commerce. in the early 1980s he relocated the operation to a site along Fairview Avenue.
His estate sold the original site along West Cedar Street to Marist College in 1996. See
Note B11
for details.
Blocksum & Company occupied a parcel which was once
owned by Liberty Starters company. Blocksum manufactured
fibers which were used in mattresses and upholstered
furniture. Blocksum purchased the 3.84 acre section just
south of Fulton Street from Hudson Casting Corporation in
1973. Hudson Casting Corporation sold the remainder to
Vincent & Elvira Russo. In turn they sold a small irregular
section to Blocksum, and retained a 3.91 rectangular lot
bordering the northern side of West Cedar Street. These three sections are seen on Map
4289. The section on West Cedar Street is now the site of a Medical building, but has a 10'
easement on its west border as a right of way for services to support the Blocksum section.
See
note B5
for details. and Map 4289 at left.
Hyson Garage was located at 80 Fulton St. It was last owned by William Edward Hyson Jr
"Bill" (1940-1999) and his wife Janet Louise Tyrrell Hyson
(1938 - 2002); she worked as his business manager. Bill ran
a tow truck business, and stored many wrecked autos on the
site for over fifty years. In his spare time from towing, he
hoped to rebuild some wrecks or at least to salvage parts.
However he was not entirely responsible for the
environmental problems on the site. Previous owners
included a mineral wood company, an asbestos wood
company, a refinery, and several oil delivery businesses, all of who operated before any
thought of environmental controls. Both Bill and Janet are buried in Union Cemetery Hyde
Park NY. See
note B10
for details.
John Arborio Inc was a family owned road and bridge construction company reputed to be
the second largest such company in the Northeast area (behind only the Perini Construction of
Massachusetts). In 1925 Arborio purchased what had been the site of Reliance Aniline and
Chemical Company adjoining the Central New England Railroad from Cedar Street as far North
as Fulton Street. Arborio was a major contractor for the New York Thruway from New York
City through Albany and west to Buffalo. He also did the Northway from Albany to the
Canadian border, and in the early 1970s he widened the Northway from two lanes to three
lanes each direction. The practice in heavy construction was to store the equipment on or
near the completed site until it could be moved directly to the next construction site. So
Poughkeepsie was not the transfer station. It was the center of operations, including
engineering, commercial and legal aspects of the business. See
note B9
for details..
Mc Manus Tavern (later known to many students as Frank's) was located at the southeast
corner of Fulton Street and North Road. It was very popular with Marist Students when the
legal drinking age was 18, but its popularity and trade fell off when the age was raised to 21.
See
Note B7
for details.
The Frisbie Pie Company bought a branch location at 70 West Cedar Street in June 1937
and held it until May 1938, when it sold it to Hudson Valley Pie Company, which operated on
the site until June 1951. The Frisbie Pie Company major operation was in Bridgeport CT,
starting in 1871 when William Russell Frisbie moved to Bridgeport to manage the local branch
of the Olds Baking Company. He soon purchased the company and renamed it The Frisbie Pie
Company. The operation was very successful. After William Frisbie died in 1903, his son
Joseph operated the ovens until his death in 1940. He also established shops in Poughkeepsie
NY, Hartford Ct, and Providence RI. Joseph's widow and the head baker continued the
operation until 1958, baking 80,000 pies per day in 1956. It is not known whether Hudson
Valley baked its own pies or was a distributor for Frisbie.


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One of Frisbie Pie Company's early customers was Yale
University. The students discovered that by inverting the tin
pie plates they could twirl them considerable distances. They
called them a variety of names. Somebody on the West
Coast was tossing an upside down pie platter on the Santa
Monica beach when he was offered $0.25 for the pie plate.
He realized that the plates cost only five cents apiece, and
started a business selling them, using plastic instead of
metal. Wham-O entered the business, and hearing that
students on the East Coast were holding competitions, using
pie plates from Frisbie Pie Company, coined the name Frisbee
(to avoid legal complications).

back
Private housing along North Road (Route 9) and Bech Place
Charles and Rose M Bennett sold Fairview Improvement Co lot #6 on Bech Place to Marist
College on August 28, 1998. See
note A1
for details.
Edna G. Freer of 77 North Road sold Fairview Improvement Co lot #9 at 77 North Road to
Marist College on 1 June 1984. See
note A3
for details.
Phyllis J Alongi sold Fairview Improvement Co lot #11 at 75 North Road to Marist College on 14
May 1990. See
note A2
for details.
The executors of the estate of Margaret V Bahret, dec'd sold Fairview Improvement Co lots 12
& 14 to Marist College on 10 June 1994. See
note A5
for details.
Anna Habinowski sold Fairview Improvement Co lot #13 at 73 North Road to Marist College on
1 Nov 1984. See
note B1
for details.
Russell W Hadden of Highland NY sold Fairview Improvement Co lot #15 at 71 North Road to
Marist College on 9 August 1982. See
note B2
for details
Joseph William Berry Jr sold Fairview improvement Co lot # 16 in 2011 to Marist Real Property
Services. See
note B12
for details..
Michael J Cassetta & ors sold Fairview Improvement Co lot #17 at 69 North to Marist College
on 21 July 1990. See
note A4
for details.
John Manfredi Sr sold Fairview Improvement Co lot #19 at 67 north Road to Marist on 30
December 1993. See
note B4
for details.
Peter F and Maria T Belmonte sold Fairview Improvement Co lot #21 at 65 North Road to
Marist College on 10 Nov 1980. See
note B3
for details.
Robert and Carolyn R Van Tassell sold Fairview Improvement Co lot #23 at 63 North Road to
Marist College on 10 August 1981. See
note A9
for details.

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Acquisitions by Marist College ( 1979 - )


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Early in the expansion period, Marist College acquired properties in its own name, so a search
of the county records with Marist College as the grantee shows many acquisitions. At some
period, the college created a subsidiary company, Marist Real Property Services Inc., and the
subsidiary continued purchasing the properties now used for college housing, tennis courts,
and maintenance. A computer search at the Dutchess County Records Office at 22 Market
Street (2nd floor) would help any researcher locate all the properties purchased in the 1979 to
present period. Some early records may not be computerized; they can be located in the
index books for grantors and grantees, and the individual deeds located in large books in the
office.
Examples of transfers located in a recent search:
liber 1986 page 268
liber 2011 page 64
1990 doc# 5160 liber 1871 page 843 Michael J Cassetta & ors to Marist College: Cassetta
house between North Road and Bech Place
1990 doc# 5161 liber 1871 page 846 members of Cassetta family to Marist College:Cassetta
lot #18 on map 1166 between North Road and Bech Place
1992 doc# 4140 Sidney Pines & Diane Edelstein to Marist College: lot #20 on map 1166.
2000 doc# 3315 Joseph Sabia, executor of estate of Anthony and Dolores Sabia to Marist Real
Property Services Inc parcel along West Cedar Street described as adjacent to lands of
Chamber of Commerce
2000 doc# 8563 D B Ventures Inc to Marist Real Property Services Inc: parcel south side of
Fulton Street
2001 doc# 3134 Phyllis M Granger to Marist Real Property Services Inc: parcel on West Cedar
near Terminal Road
2005 doc# 2960 Dut Co Indus Dev Agency to Marist College . parcels under Leo and Sheahan
Dormitories
2005 doc# 2968 Dut Co Indus Dev Agency to Marist College 6.16 acres south of Fulton
Street
2013 doc# 4780 Dut Co Indus Dev Agency to Marist College Parcel along Cedar Street
2013 doc# 4782 Dut Co Indus Dev Agency to Marist College Library and Humanities Building
parcels
51 Fulton Street building complex. In October 2013 I
learned that Marist has purchased a large warehouse at
51 Fulton Street, with the intention to relocate its
maintenance operation and storage facility there. This would
free up space in what is now mostly dormitory and recreation
area for further use. The previous user of the space was the
Dutchess County Resource Recovery Agency. When the
Agency relocated to a space along Sand Dock Road near the
main IBM building, 51 Fulton became available, and was
publicly listed for competitive bidding. In February 2011 Dutchess County issued a RFP for a
Property Boundary Survey and Lot Line Realignment. The County solicited purchase offers
(RFP-DCB-20-12) on 16 October 2012 with a deadline of 7 November 2012. A previous
Internet search gave the details of the solicitation, but that document has been removed from


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the Internet in favor of a short notice that the solicitation has been closed. Two previous
owners/lessors of the building may have been Waste Management and Hudson Baylor
Corporation, the latter a Newburgh based company.
Along the western boundary of the property there is a right-of-way for Emr-poughkeepsie, a
metals recycling company with a sign Eastern Metals Recovery with a parcel immediately north
of the complex purchased by Marist.
Just above 51 Fulton at 57 Fulton is a 28,000 square feet
warehouse occupied by the J. C. Paper Company. which is a
New York privately held company established in 1956. A
street sign indicates it is for sale or lease; recently the asking
price was dropped from $1,600,600 to $1,200,000. The
building sits on 1.6 acres and I was informed that it has been
vacant since 2007.
Just beyond the J C Paper Company warehouse is the Children's Home of Poughkeepsie, a not-
for-profit agency established in 1847. The Home provides a range of services, many of which
are located at other sites in Poughkeepsie, but it still maintains residential services on its
campus. The remainder of Fulton Street has private homes until it reaches the Violet Avenue
School at the corner of Fulton Street and Violet Avenue.
Postscript - November 2013
Change, not stability. If the reader glances at the deed history of many of the industries or
agencies in this chapter, he/she will be surprised at how many changes occurred in the short
century covered by this essay. When I became president of Marist College in 1958, Dutchess
County leading citizens pointed out six key industries which had a history of supporting fund
drives by non-profit institutions. Their history is interesting.
International Business Machines was the dominant employer. Started in Endicott NY as a
manufacturer of tabulating machines, it moved into computers, and by the early 1960s it has
become the dominant semiconductor manufacturer in the world by construction of the Fishkill
operation. Since then it has moved away from manufacturing, although it continues to
manufacture one major product at the Poughkeepsie plant. It has discontinued or sold off
much of its manufacturing of smaller items, and now sees itself as a software developer and
consultant to other businesses. Thus its presence in Dutchess County has diminished, and
perhaps may diminish more in the future decades.
DeLaval Separator Co manufactured and sold cream separators and milking machines,many of
which wound up in dairy farms which processed their own milk.. It's major location was along
the Hudson River, but it moved to smaller quarters along Route 44 east of the city of
Poughkeepsie. By the 1970s it was engaged in varies uses of separator, such as in aircraft
carriers. These huge ships had the problem of carrying heavy supplies of gasoline to fuel its
aircraft for months at a time. As the fuel was consumed, the buoyancy of the carrier made it
difficult to keep the takeoff and landing surfaces level. DeLaval developed a separator system
which introduced sea water into the gas tanks to keep them full, but enable the crew to
separate the gasoline from the water using separator techniques. It is not known whether
DeLaval conducts any manufacturing in Dutchess County.
CH Energy, better known as Central Hudson manufactured its own gas and ran hydroelectric
power stations. In the past two decades, it has handed off manufacturing of gas and
electricity to other agencies, and now concentrates on distribution of gas and electric to
customers in the mid-Hudson area. In 2013 CH Energy was sold to a Canadian Company,
presumably to give that company a market for its electric generator capacity.
Western Printing and Lithographing Co printed a variety of books and magazines from its plant
opposite Marist College. In the past decades, it has abandoned its printing in favor of



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publishing such items as Golden Books.
Schatz Federal Bearing Corporation conducted its bearing activity at 70 Fairview Avenue. The
Schatz Company purchased the larger Federal Bearing Co and supplied bearings to many of
the aircraft and vehicles used in World War II. In the 1950s it was the major supplier to Ford
Motor Company for use in automobiles. It lost out to competitors located overseas. It was
reorganized in 1981 and now occupies a smaller space at 10 Fairview Avenues, concentrating
on precision manufacturing of ball bearings for specialized uses. George Bennett, Schatz
president, had married into the Schatz family, and his family home was in Fairview off Fulton
Street near Inwood Lake. The homestead was sold and now is the site of upscale housing
development.
Daystrom Company manufactured electronic test equipment in a plant along route 55 just east
of the City of Poughkeepsie. It became Daystrom Weston company, along the way buying
Heath Company, who manufactured HeathKits. Daystrom moved out of the Dutchess area; its
plant is now occupied by a storage facility.
Manufacturing in the Poughkeepsie area has been replaced by service organizations, so that
education (Marist College, Dutchess Community College, Culinary Institute of America, local
elementary and secondary school systems, Oakwood School, Our Lady of Lourdes High School)
and healthcare (Health Quest, Vassar Hospital, and many other smaller facilities) now
constitute the major components of the employment life of the area.
Given the short life spans of the major industries, we should not be surprised by the short life
spans of smaller industries. This becomes evident if the reader cruises through the history of
the companies cited in this essay.
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Endnotes
Note one. See deed 15 dec 1881 liber 207 page 281 grantor: Estate of William R
Davies dec'd to grantee: George A Bech. in the Dutchess County Clerk's Records on
Market Street, Poughkeepsie. William Davies's sons Thomas L Davies and William H.
Davies were executors of the will. The deceased Davies had been very active in
real estate, so his name appears as grantee and grantor often in the deeds section
of the records of the County Clerk of Dutchess County. There is a street named in
his honor near the current route nine passing by the Church of the Holy Comforter,
the church from which of George and Elizabeth Bech were buried.
back
Note two. See deed 15 May 1907 liber 354 page 182 grantor: Henry C. Barber,
referee to grantee: Cristian F Bahret for $18,800. The 1858 map of the property
was filed 15 Dec 1881 claiming a total of 372 acres less the acres granted to the
Poughkeepsie & Eastern RR and a right of way of the Poughkeepsie Water
Commission, both occurring after the original map, that was drawn by surveyor
Henry D. Myers, later owner of the Myers parcel in this history of former owners of
property now owned by Marist College. The sale was done by court order against
the persons of interest in the estate of Elizabeth McCarty Bech.
back



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Note three. The legend is that Brother Zephiriny notified his superiors in France
that the 372 acre property was available for purchase at a very reasonable price.
The superiors could see no use for so large a tract. Brother Zephiriny replied that
the Jesuits had purchased 1000 acres in Hyde Park. The superiors still turned him
down. We are still looking for any correspondence which might validate this legend,
both in the Brothers’ archives in Esopus New York and the central archives in Rome,
Italy. The legend does not appear in the Annals of St. Ann’s Hermitage 1904-1934.
back
Note A1. Trail of Fairview Improvement Co lot #6 Marist College :
4 Feb 1910 liber 413 page 246: Fairview Improvement Company to Arthur and
Mary Odell for $400
28 Jan 1922 liber 420 page 472: Arthur Odell & wife Mary to Herman Grossman
15 May 1922 liber 424 page 43: Herman D & Tillie Grossman to Ida Dayton Alberic
Dayton
30 Oct 1962 liber 1090 page 233: Ida Dayton Alberic Dayton to Vincent Peluse &
ors
4 Dec 1963 liber 1115 page 1880: Peluse family members to Charles Bennett
24 August 1998 doc#7805 Charles & Rose M Bennett to Marist College
back
Note A2. Trail of Fairview Improvement Co lot #11 (75 North Road) to Marist
College
17 Jan 1910 liber 363 page 512 Fairview Improvement Co to Lansing A Joice
1 June 1943 (recorded in 1946) liber 608 page 114 Lansing A Joice & wife of
Montgomery Street to Catherina Alessandro of 69 North Road
26 Dec 1967 liber 1236 page 175: Catherina & Emanuel Alessandro to Thomas
Alessandro, John J Alessandro and Grace Spina
31 Mar 1976 liber 1428 page 547 Emanuel Alessandro (by John J Alessandro,
attorney) to Phyllis J Alongi
14 May 1990 liber 1864 page 74 Phyllis J Alongi to Marist College
back
Note A3. Trail of Fairview Improvement Co lot #9 to Marist College
9 May 1910 liber 365 page 212 Fairview Improvement Co to Maysie B Osborne
5 May 1923 liber 433 page 172 Maysie B Osborne to Dorothy Kirchhoff
25 Feb 1927 liber 474 page 74 Dorothy Kirchhoff to Goldie Freer
Upon her death, Goldie Freer willed parcel to Henry Russell Freer
20 apr 1965 liber 1175 or 1125 page 299 Henry Russell Freer to Henry R and Edna
G Freer
Henry R Freer died 16 July 1980
1 June 1984 liber 1635 page 5 Edna G Freer of 77 North Road to Marist College.
back
Note A4. Trail of Fairview Improvement Co lot #17 to Marist College
1 Nov 1909 liber 365 page 290 Fairview Improvement Co to John W & Susan
Hyland.
2 Aug 1920 liber 411 page 124 John and Susan Hyland to Piletus L & Mary L
Canfield
21 June 1923 liber 434 page 391: Piletus L & Mary L Canfield to Samuel Effron



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31 Aug 1934 liber 437 page 31: Samuel & Fannie Effron to Stephen P & Mary A
Fszol
15 Sep 1927 liber 439 page 3: Stephen P & Mary A Fszol to Louis Grossman & Irvin
Tofel
15 Sept 1927 liber 479 page 484 Louis Grossman & wf and Irving Tofel & wf to
Salvatore Damico & Biagi Doria
21 Jan 1928 liber 483 page 48: Biagi & Mary Doria and Salvatore & Francesca
Damico to Fannie Rich & Florence Nordstrom
1 Aug 1929 liber 499 page 75 Fannie Rich & Florence Nordstrom to Anna Pribish
28 Feb 1930 liber 504 page 98: Anna Pribish to Sebastiano and Mary M Cassetta:
lot #17
18 Dec 1979 liber 1531 page 145: Agreement Sebastiano and Mary Cassetta to
Town of Pougkeepsie and 4th Ward Sewer Area
29 dec 1989 liber 1854 page 836 Mary Cassetta to Michael Cassetta & ors
31 July 1990 liber 1871 page 846 doc# 5161 Michael J Cassetta & ors to Marist
College
back
Note A5. Trail of sale of lots #12 & #14 (27 Bech Place) to Marist College
2 July 1917 liber 398 page 568: Fairview Improvement Company to Lawrenc Mingy
7 July 1917 liber 398 page 565 Fairview Improvement Co to Lawrence Mingy
1 Aug 1923 liber 436 page 185 Lawrence L Mingy Jr to William D. Osterhoudt
23 August 1933 liber 534 page 58 William D Osterhoudt & wf to Margaret Bahret
22 April 1979 liber 1507 page 6 Margaret Virginia Bahret & Margaret Bahret to
Margaret Virginia Bahret.
Combines lots 12 and 14 with address 27 Bech Place
10 June 1994 Margaret Bahret dec'd by executor Margaret Bahret to Marist College
for $110,000

back
Note A6. Sales of lot occupied by MidHudson Mall, opposite Marist Campus

The Mall is bookended by Home Depot and Staples.
8 October 1909 liber 362 page 309 Fairview Improvement Co to F.I.A.T.

28 july 1910 liber 365 page 400 Fairview Improvement Co to F.I.A.T.

20 July 1910 liber 365 page 410 City of Poughkeepsie to F.I.A.T.

gives access to land near Hudson River given to City of Poughkeepsie by
Nicholas Jungeblut

20 February 1911 liber 374 page 236 F.I.A.T. to Fairview Improvement Co

agreement to place railroad switch on FIAT land

6 February 1918 liber 401 page 201 F.I.A.T. to Duesenberg Motors Corporation

14 July 1922 liber 425 page 276 Duesenberg Motors Corporation to Clement C
Miniger

15 July 1922 liber 425 page 279 Clement C Miniger & wife to Electric Auto-Lite


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Company
(Electric Auto-Lite was a subsidiary of Willys)
6 February 1926 liber 463 page 474 Electric Auto-Lite Company to Ray Securities
Company
5 March 1928 liber 483 page 436 Raysec Corp to Lancia Motors of America
Raysec is successor to Ray Securities Company
18 March 1931 liber 512 page 387 Lancia Motors of America by referee Leon E Fay
for bankrupt Lancia to Raysec Corp
7 April 1932 liber 523 page 167 Raysec Corp to May L Buhrer
29 Oct 1934 liber 541 page 326 May L Buhrer to Edward H Wadewitz
19 January 1935 liber 544 page 54 Edward H Wadewitz to Western Printing &
Lithographic Company
transactions after Western Printing & Lithographing Co decided to leave Poughkeepsie.
24 June 1985 liber 1674 page 102 Western Publishing Inc to Hexalon Real Estate
Inc of Atlanta Ga

complete written description of the parcel

26 June 1985 liber 1674 page 106 Hexalon Real Estate Inc to Arthur H Bienenstock
of 100 Wall Street NYC

1995 doc#1325 liber 1957 page 612 Arthur M Bienenstock to MidHudson Center LLC

1996 doc#4421 liber 1981 page 311 MidHudson Center LLC to BC_NY LLC 5 year
lease

1998 doc#6819 MidHudson Center LLC to Starwood Cerozzi Poughkeepsie Inc

2000 doc#2237 MidHudson Center LLC Starwood Cerozzi Poughkeepsie Inc 48 year
lease

2000 doc #6501 MidHudson Center LLC Staples the Office Superstore East Inc
200 x 200 parcel east of route 9 originally used for parking for Woodcliff Pleasure Park
28 July 1936 liber 604 page 570 Dutchess County Sheriff to Tempa E Dyruff

tax sale of 200 x 200 parcel east of route 9

25 Aug 1946 liber 634 page 224 Tempa E Dyruff to Arthur Wheeler

lease of 200 x 200 parcel east of route 9

1 Feb 1946 liber 635 page 437 Tempa E Dyruff to Western Printing and
Lithographic Co.

back
Note A7 Details of deeds related to Steel Plant Studio
21 Dec 1984 liber 1656 page 490: Martin A & Sylvia Kurkhill to Marist College

The deed mentions three separate parcels previously acquired by the Kurkhills.
parcel #1

3 Feb 1917 liber 396 page 492: Fairview Improvement Co to Christian F. Bahret

23 Nov 1956 liber 933 page 185 Rosa Bahret, sole survivor of & executor of estate
of Christian Bahret to Martin Kurkhill & Morris B May.

trapezoid 341 feet south of Fulton between Bech Place and railroad width


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57.6 north-to-south and 166 north and 133 south

parcel #2 8 Jun 1941 liber 1059 page 915 Fairview Improvement Co to Martin
Kurkhill and Morris B May
50' x 30' strip to Bech Place ?
parcel #3 1927 liber 485 page 361: Fairview Improvement Company to
James & Nellie Bergin
1 Nov 1927 liber 480 page 474: James & Nellie Bergin to Thomas Czaplenski
30 Nov 1948 liber 612 page 451: Thomas & Helen Czaplenski to John Blandino
16 Apr 1945 liber 625 page 57: John & Helen Blandino to Louis Lazar & Alfred
Dube
24 Dec 1945 liber 634 page 146: Alfred M Dube and Louis Lazar & ano to Stephen
Balint
8 Dec 1949 liber 734 page 507: Stephen Balint to Mollie Eisner & Irvin M Tofel
31 Mar 1950 liber 740 page 309: Irvin M Tofel to Mollie Eisner
1 Apr 1952 liber 799 page 334: Mollie Eisner of 45 Hooker Ave to Martin Kurkhill of
Mt Kisco
144' x 30' strip between building and Bech Place


back
Note A8 Details of deeds related to Kem Plastic Playing Cards Co
Kem ownership of part of the Winslow Estate
16 Dec 1946 liber 652 page 64 Runk Realty Corp to Kem Plastic Playing Card Co

27 acre former Winslow estate west of route nine

1 Feb 1948 liber 682 page 605 Kem Plastic Playing Cards Co to V. J. Costanzi Co

Deeds relating to Kem purchase of a building between Bech Place and the railroad
17 May 1912 liber 374 page 278: Fairview Improvement Company to Alexander
Bolognesi of Brooklyn NY

17 Nov 1913 liber 392 page 487: Alexander & Benilde Bolognesi to A. B.
Manufacturing Company

29 Mar 1915 liber 378 page 276: Fred Hornbeck referee for A. B. Manufacturing
Company to Mechanics & Metals National Bank of City of New York

2 Apr 1915 liber 393 page 23: Mechanics & Metals National Bank of City of New
York to William L Lyall

25 Sep 1916 liber 395 page 84: William Lyall to W. L. Battery Company Inc

10 July 1917 liber 399 page 120: W. L. Battery Company Inc to Permalife Storage
Battery Co

8 Apr 1920 liber 410 page 388: Permalife Storage Battery Co to David Alexander

27 May 1920 liber 410 page 389: David Alexander, widower, to Baxton Realty


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Company
1 Oct 1920 liber 412 page 105: Baxton Realty Company to N Y Enameled Steel
Sign Co Inc
15 Dec 1927 liber 481 page 395: N Y Enameled Steel Sign Co Inc to L.D. Nelke
Signs of New York
24 Sep 1935 liber 547 page 369: Joseph Acher, referee for L.D. Nelke Signs of New
York to Poughkeepsie Trust Company
1 Apr 1942 liber 599 page 196: Poughkeepsie Trust Company to Western Printing
and Lithographing Co of NY
30 Dec 1943 liber 613 page 311: Western Printing and Lithographing Co of NY to
Western Printing and Lithographing Co of Wisconsin
31 Dec 1946 liber 655 page 183: Western Printing and Lithographing Co of
Wisconsin to Kem Plastic Playing Cards Inc.
The deeds above refer to the larger parcel between Bech Place and the railroad. the Kem
sale to Marist College mentions two other parcels, which were split from what had been a
single parcel. This provided Kem with ownership from the railroad at the east to Bech
Place at the west.
9 Dec 1918 liber 404 page 33: Fairview Improvement Company to Adolph Paul
Koerner

12 Aug 1935 liber 557 page 468: Paul Miller, treasurer of Dutchess County
conducted a tax sale on the Koerner holdings which resulted in a sale to Martha
Gellrich

1 June 1949 liber 719 page 550: Martha Gellrich to Charles Chapman Sr.

27 Dec 1951 liber 795 page 544: Charles Chapman Sr to Edward Dingee (first
section of the Chapman purchase)

16 Feb 1951 liber 795 page 547: Edward Dingee to Kem Plastic Playing Cards
Inc.
13 Nov 1957 liber 961 page 467 Charles Chapman Jr as executor of estate of

Charles Chapman Sr to Joseph E Prince. $4500 for (second section of the
Chapman purchase)

30 Dec 1957 liber 980 page 432: Joseph W and Mary Prince to Kem Plastic
Playing Cards Inc.

tis parcel ws directly north of the Kem holdings
After Kem Plastic Playing Cards relocated to Long Island, the three parcels were sold to
Marist College
2004 doc# 12479 KPPC Inc doing business as Kem Plastic Playing Cards Inc to
Marist Real Property Services Inc

back
Note A9 Details of Fairview Improvement lot 23 at 63 North road on Map 713

6 August 1919 liber 406 page 485 Fairview Improvement Co to William Howell

08 October 1927 liber 480 page 199 William Howell to George L and Mae McMickle

30 November 1951 liber 790 page 376 Albert & Martha McMickle to Charles E and


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Dorothy M Hughes
8 January 1975 liber 1399 page 497 Charles E and Dorothy M Hughes to Robert E
Walberg and Lorraine S Anderson
18 December 1979 liber 1526 page 139 Robert E and Lorraine S Walberg wf to
Robert and Carolyn Van Tassell
10 August 1981 liber 1563 page 477 Robert & Carolyn Van Tassell to Marist College
back
Note B1 Details of Fairview lot # 13 at 73 North Road to Marist College
2 July 1917 liber 398 page 569 Fairview Improvement Co to Lawrence Mingey: at
least lot # 14
19 Jan 1920 liber 408 page 415 Fairview Improvement Co to Lawrence Mingey lot
12 of Ogden map 713
1 Aug 1923 liber 436 page 125: Lawrence Mingey Jr to William D and Kittie
Osterhoudt: lots 13, 12, and 14.
30 Mar 1945 liber 624 page 220: Ronald A Osterhoudt and Margaret Bahret to
Katherine Habinowski
lots 12, 13, 14 of map 713, except what was previously sold
13 Sep 1929 liber 499 page 439; William D Osterhoudt and wife Kittie to
William & Margaret Bahret: lot #12 of map 713
23 Aug 1933 liberr 534 page 58: William D & Kittie Osterhoudt to William F &
Margaret Bahret: lot #14 of map 713
24 Jun 1964 liber 1135 page 255: Katherine Habinowski to Walter J & Anna
Habinowski: lot # 13 of map 713
1 Nov 1984 liber 1651 page 340: Anna Habinowski to Marist College
back
Note B2 Details of Fairview lot # 15 at 71 North Road to Marist College
13 Oct 1909 liber 363 page 368 Fairview Improvement Company to William H
Flannigan
2 Mar 1923 liber 433 page 121 William H & Mary Flannigan to Henry J and Julia
Curran
21 Nov 1968 liber 1255 page 750 Ann Elizabeth Pribish as executor of will of
Julia Curran dec'd to Richard J and Larraine Schamberg
21 Nov 1968 liber 1255 page 752 Henry and Francis Curran to Richard J and
Larraine J Schamberg
22 Aug 1972 liber 1339 page 52 Richard J & Larraine J Schamberg to Joseph M &
Patricia Norton
14 Jul 1975 liber 1567 page 716 Joseph Michael & Patricia Irene Norton to Joseph
Michael Norton
6 Aug 1982 liber 1584 page 620 Joseph Michael Norton to Russell W Hadden
9 Aug 1982 liber 1587 page 310 Russell W Hadden of Highland NY to Marist College
back
Note B3 Details of Fairview lot # 21 at 65 North Road to Marist College


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20 Apr 1920 liber 409 page 583 Fairview Improvement Company to Charles S
Mitchell and Joseph Perlmutter: lots 16, 21, & 22 of map 713
22 Jun 1923 liber 434 page 430 Charles S Mitchell and Rose Mitchell to Joseph
Perlmutter: their share of lots 16, 21, & 22
15 Sep 1923 liber 437 page 289 Joseph and Jennie B Perlmutter to William J Davis
6 june 1941 liber 592 page 220: George Davis and James E Carroll, executors of
estate of William J Davis dec'd to Margaret Davis
26 Aug 1942 liber 603 page 192: Margaret Davis to Nicholas & Margarert Manna
3 Oct 1950 liber 757 page 192: Nicholas and Margaret Manna to Frank W & Edith
M Gallo
3 Jun 1974 liber 1384 page 241: Edith M Gallo of 65 North Road to Peter F & Maria
T Belmonte
11 Dec 1979 liber 1531 page 125 agmt Town of Poughkeepsie with Peter F and
Maria T Belmonte easement for 4th ward sewer improvement area
10 Nov 1982 liber 1585 page 694 Peter F & Maria T Belmonte to Marist College
back
Note B4 Details of Fairview lot # 19 at 67 North Road to Marist College
20 Feb 1920 liber 409 page 432 Fairview Improvement Co to Edward & Lucy
Robinson Ryan
7 Augt 1930 liber 508 page 208 Edward & Lucy Ryan to John Manfredi
23 Dec 1992 doc#8893 liber 1938 page 169 John Manfredi Sr to Marist College
back
Note B5 Details of Blocksum & Co to Marist Real Property Services Co
24 Jan 1919 liber 404 page 337; Fairview Improvement Compan to Liberty Starters
Corp
$1500 for 5 acres north of Cedar Street
11 July 1921 liber 416 page 341 Edward Stickles, receiver for Liberty Starters Co
to Albert J Nichols
7 Sept 1921 liber 417 page 389 Albert L and Florence May Nichols to Algonquin
Electric Manufacturing Corporation
27 Oct1926 liber 471 page 237 Algonquin Electric Manufacturing Corporation to
Algonquin Electric Company Inc
15 Jan 1927 liber 473 page 256 A E Electric Company, a NY corporation to
Algonquin Electric Company, a Delaware corporation
4 Dec 1928 liber 491 page 439 Algonquin Electric Company by referee to
Poughkeepsie Trust Company
John Van Der Water was the referee
30 July 1928 liber 437 page 415 Poughkeepsie Savings Bank to Anna Hanson &
Carissa Donaldson
10 Apr 1929 liber 495 page 51 Anna Hanson & Carissa Donaldson to Fairview
Foundry inc


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23 June 1937 Poughkeepsie Trust Company to The Frisbie Pie Company
19 Apr 1938 The Frisbie Pie Company to Hudson Valley Pie Company
15 June 1951 Hudson Valley Pie Company to Lois Smith Morin
this parcel at address 70 West Cedar Street
8 Nov 1956 liber 933 page 397 Lois Smith Morin To Fairview Foundry Corp
2 Jun 1958 liber 980 page 350 Fairview Foundry Corp to Harris-Intertype Corp
28 Jan 1969 liber 1259 page 570 Harris-Intertype to Hudson Castings Corp
Parcel #1 of map # 4289 filed with Dutchess County Clerk 20 Nov
1973
12 July 1973 liber 1363 page 314 Hudson Castings Corp to Blocksum & Co
Parcel #1 of map # 4289 filed with Dutchess County Clerk 20 Nov 1973
26 Apr 1973 liber 1328 page 539 Hudson Castings Corp to Vincent F & Elvira E
Russo
26 Nov 1973 liber 1372 page 884 Vincent P and Elvira E Russo to Blocksum & Co
Parcel #2 of map # 4289 filed with Dutchess County Clerk 20 Nov 1973
2003 doc# 4214 Brush & Weaving Corp (formerly Blocksum & Co) to Marist Real
Property Services
Parcels #1 and #2 of map # 4289 filed with Dutchess County Clerk 20 Nov
1973

Parcel #3 of map # 4289 remains private with a medical practice
building on the site:
29 Nov 1973 liber 1373 page 224 Vincent P & Elvira E Russo to Isidro Ferrando
MD 3.91 acre parcel #3
2006 doc # 821 Ferrando Trust to Govind S. Gill MD ofr Rhinebeck.
back
Note B6 Deeds related to Liberty Starters Corporation and Reliance Aniline &
Chemical Company
Liberty Starters Corporation
24 Jan 1919 liber 404 page 337; Fairview Improvement Company to Liberty
Starters Corp
$1500 for 5 acres north of Cedar Street
11 July 1921 liber 416 page 341 Edward Stickles, receiver for Liberty Starters Co
to Albert J Nichols
see under Blocksum for further history
Reliance Aniline & Chemical Company
30 Sept 1911 liber 371 page 151 Fairview Improvement Company to Standard
Concrete Co of Poughkeepsie


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14 July 1917 liber 399 page 62 Standard Concrete Co of Poughkeepsie by receiver
to Reliance Aniine and Chemical Co $4300
23 Mar 1920 liber 409 page 151: Fairview Improvement Company to Reliance
Aniline & Chemical Corp
5.12 acres along Central NE Railway and Cedar Street
Agreement 23 Mar 1920 liber 409 page 157: William Knauss and Reliance Aniline &
Chemical Corporation
releases Knauss right to right of way on Aniline lot
14 August 1923 Ray Guernsey, special master for Reliance Aniline & Chemical Co to
North America Color Corp
$17,000 for 5.12 acres
15 Jun 1925 liber 457 page 124 North American Color Corp to Maurice Simmons
30 Dec 1929 liber 505 pa ge 392 Maurice and Dora Simmons to John Aborio
7 Oct 1950 liber 757 page 495 John and Maria Arborio to John Arborio Inc
parcel along CNE RR from Cedar Street to planned Spring St extension
18 Sep 1995 liber 1060 page 153 doc# 6660 John Arborio Inc to Marist Real
Property Services Inc.
back
Note B7 Deeds related to lots 1,2 and 4 on map 713
27 Feb 1923 liber 434 page 283: John G and Frederika Bahret to Walter E and Edith
K Walker
probably part of lot 3. Bahret purchased from his brother Christian Bahret, who was
president of Fairfiew Improvement Co
7 July 1924 liber 480 page 361: Fairview Improvement Company to James &
Nellie Bergin
parcel between Bech Place and CNERR 203 feet south of Fulton 59 x 190 x 68 x 186
below other lands of Bergin
Agreement 30 Nov 1928 liber 491 page 44: Fairview Improvement Company & ors
with James J & Nellie A Bergin
Bergins own lots 1, 2, part of 3, and 4. Agreement releases from restrictions.
5 Dec 1928 liber 491 page 447 Walter E Walker and Edith K Walker to James J
Bergin and Nellie A Bergin
lots # 1 and #2 on Ogden map 713 drawn on October 1910
7 Dec 1928 liber 491 page 446: James J and Nellie A Bergin to Fred and Rose
Ferris
lots # 1 and #2 on Ogden map 713 drawn on October 1910
day mon 1964 liber 1126 page 70: Rose Ferris widow & Jeanette Masour daughter,
both of Austin TX to Frank Sorrentino: lot # 1 on Ogden Map # 713
16 Mar 1993 document #1742: Dominick J Caputo to Beck-Turek Ltd: lot #3 on
Ogden Map 713
missing: trail beyond Frank Sorrentino


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back
Note B9. Deeds relating to John Arborio Inc of 35 West Cedar Street
24 Aug 1923 liber 437 page 157 Ray Guernsey, special master for Reliance Aniline
& Chemical Co to North America Color Corp
$17,000 for 5.12 acres
15 Jun 1925 liber 457 page 124 North American Color Corp to Maurice Simmons
30 Dec 1929 liber 505 pa ge 392 Maurice and Dora Simmons to John Aborio
7 Oct 1950 liber 757 page 495 John and Maria Arborio to John Arborio Inc
parcel along CNE RR from Cedar Street to planned Spring St extension
18 Sep 1995 liber 1060 page 153 doc# 6660 John Arborio Inc to Marist Real
Property Services Inc.
back
Note B10 Deeds related to property at corner of Bech and Fulton last owned by
William Hyson
1 Feb 1911 liber 367 page 400 Fairview Improvement Co to American Mineral Wood
Co: SE corner at Fulton St and Bech Place
1 Feb 1911 liber 367 page 399 Fairview Improvement Co to American Mineral Wood
Co: gives American Mineral Wood Co the right to exchange for a larger parcel
withion two years. Option was never exercised.
10 May 1912 liber 374 page 238 American Mineral Wood Co of NJ to American
Mineral Wood Co of NY: transfers Fairview holding to a New York company
15 May 1912 liber 374 page 239 agreeent between American Mineral Wood Co of NY
and Fairview Improvement Company to share railroad tracks on American Mineral
Wood property.
15 Oct 1914 liber 396 page 416 Charles M Kirk assignee of American Mineral Wood
Co of NY to Herman Hs Vail
2 Jan 12915 liber 389 page 418 Herman H Vail to Asbestos Wood Mfg Co: parcel
with buildings & equipment
23 Sept 1919 liber 407 page 255 Asbestos Wood Mfg Co to Fred C hornbech: sale
price is $2800
23 Oct 1919 liber 407 page 518 Fred & Ellura B Hornbech to Sinclair Refining Co of
Maine: see map 1153 of 21 Oct 1919
31 Oct 1922 liber 433 page 167 Sinclair Refining Co to Tide Water Oil Sales Corp:
sells lot, factory building & right to rr switch
lease 12 Aug 1932 liber 526 page 469 Tide Water Oil Sales Corp lessor to Fred R
J Horlacher of 49 Fairview Ave lessee 110 x 250 lot with address 51-53 Fairview for
gas station
2 Mar 1945 liber 623 page 496 Tide Water Oil Sales Corp to Charles Braverman
1 May 1946 liber 652 page 117 Charles Braveman to Philip S and Agnes F Potter of
3 Dwight St
day month 1947 liber 654 page 597 Philip S and Agnes F Potter to P S Potter &
Sons Inc
3 Oct 1949 liber 727 page 391 P S Potter & Sons Inc to William E & Janet E Hyson


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who assume mortgages of $6,284.01 and $3,046.75
1999 document # 11449 Janet Hyson to Suburban Ventures Inc
(bankruptcy action)
2000 doc # 5399 Suburban Ventures Inc to Marist Real Property Services: lot
directly south of Fulton St between Bech Place and Central New England RR
back

Note B11 Deeds related to Leon Bloom, president of Hamilton Reproductions Inc
along West Cedar Street

Leon R Bloom and Hamilton Reproductions

15 June 1951 liber 776 page 311 Hudson Valley Pie Company to Lois Smith Morin
see note B5 for trail from Fairview Improvement to Hudson Valley Pie
Company.
Lois Smith Morin sells in two portions:
8 Aug 1956 liber 933 page 397 Lois Smith Morin to Fairview Foundry
in 1961 Lois Smith sells the remainder to MEJJ Reality
17 July 1961 liber 1061 page 553 Lois Smith Morin to MEJJ Realty Co., Inc.
31 Nov 1970 liber 1293 MEJJ Realty Co., Inc. to Leon R Bloom
21 Sept 1996 liber 1986 page 268 doc#7847 Leon R bloom dec'd to Marist Real
Property Services Inc.
back

Note B12 Deeds related to lot # 16 on Ogden Map 713
30 Apr 1920 liber 409 page 583 Fairview Improvement Co to Charles Mitchell &
Joseph Perlmutter:lots #16 #21 & #22
22 Jun 1923 liber 434 page 438 Charles & Rose W Mitchell to Joseph Perlmutter:
lots #16 #21 & #22
10 Sep 1923 liber 437 page 350 Joseph & Jennie S Perlmutter to Carl S Lang &
David Harris: lots #16 and # 22
19 Sep 1923 liber 437 page 371 Carl & Marie Lang and David Harris to Vincent &
Ethel Morano: lot # 16
23 Mar 1944 liber 615 page 11 Vincent A & Ethel A Morano of 3 Beck Place to
William & Nora Toomey of 9 Fulton St: lot # 16
27 Jan 1953 liber 822 page 526 Nora Toomey to John C & Frances Naylor
30 Jan 1957 liber 937 page 115 John C & Frances Naylor to Everett & Junita Parks
22 Aug 1963 liber1107 page 777 Everett Parks to Mayhill Corp
day month 1980 liber 1528 page 823 MayHill Corp at 61 North Road to Martin &
Sylvia Kurkhill and Morris & Claire May
9 Dec 1982 liber 1591 page 790 Martin Kurkhill & Morris B & Claire B May to


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Joseph William Berry Sr & Jennie
2011 document #3787 Joseph William Berry Jr to Marist Real Property Services:
lot #16 at 3 Bech Place
back
Note B13 Deeds related to Knauss Brothers abattoir
6 Aug 1919 liber 433 p 410: Fairview Improvement Company to William & Emma
Knauss
31 Dec 1924 liber 790 p 420 liber 790 page 420: William & Emma Knauss and
Ernest G and Paulina Knauss to Knauss Brothers Inc. (the abattoir parcel).
23 Oct 1957 liber 957 p 29: Knauss Brothers Inc with Fairview Improvement Co.
Agreement that wells on Knauss property are owned by Fairview Improvement who
are responsible for their maintenance.
31 Oct 1960 liber 1043 p 69: Knauss Brotheers Inc lessor to Seneca Packing Co
lessee. Seneca leases cross hatched areas on maps 2949 and 2950 for 5 years,
renewable for another 5 years for $35,000 annual rent.
1960 liber 1043 p 78: Knauss Brothers Inc agreement with Dutchess Bank & Trust
Co
1962 liber 1079 p 857: Knauss Brothers Inc agreement with Dutchess Bank & Trust
Co
1966 liber 1206 p 57 Knauss Brothers Inc to Seneca Packing Co
1966 liber 1206 p 47: Irving Schlossberg to Knauss Brothers Inc
26 Jan 1971 liber 1206 p 47: Irving Schlossberg to Knauss Brothers Inc
26 Jan 1971 liber 1302 p 567 Knauss Brothers Inc to irving Schlossberg Tax sale
22 May 1972 liber 1332 p 762 Knauss Brothers Inc by referee George G Bernhard
to Irving Schlossberg
9 March 1972 liber 1331 p 647: Irving Schlossberg to Julian E Chugerman seems to
relate to liber 1332 p 762
11 Aug 1972 liber 1338 p 359: Irving Schlossberg to Salvatore Scangarello and
Tony Pintarelli
12 Nov 1976 liber 1443 p 728: Salvatore Scangarello and Tony Pintarelli to Julian E
Chugerman. cites liber 1387 p 861
4 Nov 2008 doc# 6858: Julian E Chugerman to Landslide Enterprises, LLC 57
Fulton Street
5 Nov 2008 doc# 6860: Julian E Chugerman to Landslide Enterprises, LLC 51A
Fulton Street
the sales to Landslide Enterprises created a subdivision occupied in 2014 by J C
Paper Company as tenant.
back

Note B14 Deeds related to Star Gas Company at 33 Fulton Street


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17 July 1913 liber 382 page 217: Fairview Improvement Company to Gulf Refining
Corp based in Port Arthur, Texas
30 June 1936 liber 608 page 550: Gulf Refining Corp to Gulf Oil Corp of
Pennsylvania
Grantee owns all stock and assets of Gulf Refining Corp effective 1 Feb 1936
10 June 1943 liber 608 page 399: Gulf Oil Corp to John V and Dorothy S Bush
this deed cites preceding history
7 July 1955 liber 893 page 494: John and Dorothy Bush lessors to Duso Chemical
Company
leases most of the parcel to Duso Chemical Co except part leased to Star Gas
Cos Inc.
1964 liber 1117 page 190: John V Bush and wife Dorothy S to Kantorer Realty
Associates
sells parcel to Kantorer Realty but requires Grantee to honor lease of 7 July
1955 to Duso Chemical Co and lease dated 27 May 1948 to Star Gas Co
24 March 1972 liber 1329 page 852: Kantorer Realty Associates to Star Gas Co.,
Inc.
Grantee and Grantor at same address of 33 Fulton St
railroad has right to side track on premises.
15 August 1977 liber 1465 page 55: Star Gas Co. Inc. to Star Gas Products Inc.
back

drafted 27 September 2013
Most recent revision and spell check April 20, 2014