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The Watertown Daily Times is a newspaper published six days a week, Monday through Saturday, in Watertown, New York. It provides coverage of Jefferson County, Lewis County, St. Lawrence County and Oswego County. It was founded in 1861 and is owned by the Johnson family of Watertown.
Moses W. Field, U.S. congressman, one of the founders of the Independent Greenback Party [11] Paul Finkelman, Chancellor of Gratz College, author, historian [12] Roswell P. Flower, U.S. congressman and governor of New York (1892–1895) [13] John Gary, singer; Oscar S. Gifford, lawyer and South Dakota politician [14]
The feature was introduced on March 8, 2018, for International Women's Day, when the Times published fifteen obituaries of such "overlooked" women, and has since become a weekly feature in the paper. The project was created by Amisha Padnani, the digital editor of the obituaries desk, [1] and Jessica Bennett, the paper's gender editor. In its ...
Enfield Elementary School – The only public school in Enfield; older students go to secondary schools in the surrounding towns and cities, located on Halseyville Rd. near NY-79. Enfield Glen – A gorge in Robert H. Treman State Park, near the south town line. Hayt Corner – A location in the northeast part of Enfield.
Norm Burns, 77, Canadian ice hockey player (New York Rangers). [122] Valerio Cassani, 72, Italian footballer. [123] Arrigo Cervetto, 67, Italian communist revolutionary and politician. Sidney Robertson Cowell, 91, American ethnomusicologist. [124] Melvin Franklin, 52, American singer. [125] Mehr Abdul Haq, 79, Pakistani philologist. [126]
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New York State Route 3 is an east-west route that begins in Sterling and heads north and east to Watertown. NY 3 interchanges with I-81 at the city line. NY 3 heads east into Watertown, overlapping with both US 11 and NY 12 through downtown prior to leaving the city to the northeast to head through the Adirondacks to Plattsburgh.
These were located in the Watertown High School, St. Joachim's Academy, and the Young Men's Christian Association. [3] Around 1890 Watertown citizens began discussing a public library and applied to the Carnegie Corporation for funding. Living in New York City at the time, Emma Flower Taylor discovered the citizens' wish for a new library.