Who
Owns Rondout Creek?
by Pauline
Uchmanowicz
photo by Roy Gumpel
Director Elia Kazan
shot for his 1961 movie Splendor in the Grass on the spot that gives
the hamlet of High Falls in the Township of Rosendale its name. A sentimental
sudser starring Natalie Wood about an emotionally broken girl rebuilding
her life, Splendors story line serves as a metaphor for circumstances
surrounding a space downstream where water spills into Rondout Creek
along Bruceville Road.
For more than a century, residents and visitors frequented the area
known popularly as Rondout swimming hole, enjoying rapids, natural water
slides, sulfur springs, ancient pine trees, wildlife and sandy beach.
People fished and launched canoes and kayaks from its banks and in adjoining
woods cleared space dubbed the Commons to play donkey baseball,
and in later years other games. On October 20, 1999, the 9.5-acre parcel
of riverfront passed from ownership by High Falls Fire District into
the private hands of Robert Every. An eight-foot fence and posted sign
attesting to the fact now block its access warning: Trespassers
will be prosecuted. Some dreamers hold out hope of getting the
site back.
The tale of the swimming holes evolution from public park to private
property shares with its central subject a deep and bottomless
quality, like the intricacies of small-town life itself. (A Rosendale
resident myself, I admit to working Rosendale-channels familiar to me
in gathering this story.) No mean-spirited people inhabit this drama,
only concerned citizens whose visions of civic service and municipal
responsibility focus their energies in overlapping or divergent directions.
All but one person (who elected to speak through an intermediary) contacted
for this story gave wholeheartedly of their time, several granting interviews
of an hour or more or calling back to offer additional facts or insights.
Honoring requests to withhold information or conjectures made off
the record, I do point to composite conclusions without exposing
individual voices.
In the mid-19th century, the D & H Canal Company, which began construction
on its waterway in 1825, had holdings along the Rondout where Route
213 now curves through Lawrenceville, once home to a business owned
by Watson E. Lawrence, a successful manufacturer of cement. Also furnishing
a name to the area was Nathaniel Bruce, discoverer of chemical properties
necessary to fabricate the areas famed product. According to Manville
B. Wakefield in Coal Boats to Tidewater: The Story of the Delaware &
Hudson Canal, The busy Rondout Creek . . . was lined with industries
of all types, including in addition to the cement plant a storage
house and bluestone yard. Early in the next century, the canal company
sold land to New York Central Railroad, which halted service in the
late 1930s and sold the right of way to the swimming hole parcel to
utility giant Central Hudson.
In 1945, High Falls Fire District purchased the parcel from Central
Hudson for one dollar. A covenant was attached to the deed, stipulating
that the riverfront be held in trust for the people of High Falls to
use for recreation. As records show, the following year the covenant
was repeated in slightly more detail. Dietrich Werner of Century House
Historical Society in Lawrenceville has over a centurys worth
of documentation, including photographs, postcards and resort advertisements,
which demonstrate that the swimming hole and Commons were regularly
used as public recreation spaces. When the land passed into private
ownership in 1999, some people in the area formed the impression that
the deal was struck in secrecy.
Mick Taussig, a High Falls resident who with his wife Rachel Moore owns
13 acres opposite the swimming hole claimed, People became aware
of the action in different ways. In December 1999, I heard power saws
and saw a fire at the swimming area where huge trees were going down.
I asked the guy who looked to be in charge what was going on and couldnt
believe my ears when he said hed bought it. A rainy summer followed,
so that many people didnt take notice. Some who did come were
told to leave and became very upset.
Taussig called town and federal government officials demanding to know,
How can you cut down ancient trees? A native Australian,
he claims his country of origin is much greener and more sensitive
to conservation issues than our area in High Falls.
In the wake of the sale, a group of concerned citizens called Friends
of the Rondout formed in hopes of legally reversing the action. They
likewise sought to raise consciousness in an effort to prevent copycat
crimes. As member Peter Lambeorne Wilson explained about the organization,
No one is a professional green activist. Were
just a group of people with the impression that what happened on Rondout
Creek happens everyday, everywhere in America as consequence of not
protecting our public space.
Among the organizations projects is The Rondout Calendar
2001, designed with a mix of historical and recent photographs
courtesy of Century House archives and local photographer Roy Gumpel.
Accompanying pictures at the front of the calendar, text by Taussig
and others provides a thumbnail history of the swimming hole and its
sale. A time-line pinpointing relevant dates connected to the case is
spread across the 12 months. According to Taussig, a former physician
and current cultural anthropology professor at Columbia University,
The most terrific thing about the idea of the calendar is that
it is a work of artmaybe a collectors itemcombined
with a civic-action, wake-up call to the politics of our area. Its
also an object you can infuse with daily life and hang on the refrigerator.
The idea originated with Taussig, who recalled a campaign in Australia
to protect a place in Tasmania known as the Last Wild River. Talented
photographers like your Ansel Adams joined the protest movement and
made a calendar and the river was saved, he related. Taussig,
Moore and others, who also donated free labor, paid for the Rondout
version out-of-pocket.
At stake for many in the green organization is the question of who owns
the Rondout. Any river deemed navigable belongs to the people
of the state. We believe that this is a navigable river that belongs
to the people, Taussig said. As Wakefield documents in his D &
H Canal study, the site was chosen precisely because of the navigable
capacity of neighboring Rondout Creek, which feeds from the Wallkill
and empties into the Hudson River. The subject in general made Taussig
muse about the passivity of Americans regarding land conservation.
Circulating over and over when the Rondout swimming hole gets mentioned
is litigation, particularly the claim that the land poses unwanted liability
for the town. Century Houses Werner scoffed at the idea. Anyone
can sue anyone, but no law says you have to be insured for liability
if you own land free and clear. Theres a public misconception
about insurance, he stated, testing me with the example of who
do you sue if you or someone gets hurt or killed hiking the Appalachian
Trail. Publicly accessed land is exempt from such liability, he suggested,
unless the offending party can prove to be delinquent or culpable.
The more important question is why the public access covenant
was written into the deed, Werner wondered. Observers have speculated
that the clause was necessary for Central Hudson to retain an easement
(in legal language, a right or privilege that a person may have in anothers
land, as the right of way) for installing power lines should the need
arise.
Shortly after speaking to Werner, I ran into my lawyer at the Rosendale
Post Office and asked her what she knew about liability and public land
use. She immediately recalled a general obligation statute
stating that if land is made accessible to the public for recreational
usewhether publicly or privately heldthe owner cannot be
held liable. Local folklore corroborates the existence of the statute,
as several people claimed to know that if you post your
property as open to the public you can be sued, but if you dont,
you cannot.
Meanwhile, the Fire District has been accused of selling off the swimming
hole in a callous way, leaving locals concerned over the fate of neighboring
waterfront. Indeed, Taussig lamented, The whole of riverbanks
are being bought up in other parts of New York and New England and being
turned into public parks. Why cant that happen in our township?
To address that question, I spoke to Otto Scherrieble, one of Rosendales
elected Town Board Councilmen. Though he has been a firefighter for
35 years and is currently the assistant chief of his district, Scherrieble
explained that the sale of the swimming hole had nothing to do
with the town. The sale was brokered through High Falls Fire District,
a governmental subdivision that operates completely separate and
independently. He stated that elected officials from both Marbletown
and Rosendale were approached verbally by someone in the
Fire District to see if either wanted the Rondout parcel in question,
but both tow ns already owned and operated public recreation parks,
so they were not interested.
Asked what he knows about the actual sale itself, he said, I know
a lot about it but the one to speak to is the Chairman of the Fire District
Commissioners, who happens to be my wife, Elisa.
I admitted to flunking civics in the school of life, so the patient
Elisa Scherrieble explained to me the mutual agreement between Rosendale
and its firefighters. Five fire districts with respective houses serve
the towns population of just over 6,000 (as compared to one district
and two houses in New Paltz, a town with high-rises and double the number
of residents). Governmental entities separate from the town, the fire
districts each have a board of five elected commissioners, who serve
as the employers of the fire departments. One commissioner
is elected every year to a five-year term by duly registered voters
of the High Falls Fire District, drawn from Board of Elections rolls.
None of the commissioners draw salaries and neither do firefighters;
all are volunteers. Yearly operating expenses, gathered on a tax-collecting
basis, cover the cost of insurance, repairs, maintenance and the housing
of equipment and tools. Apparatus, such as trucks, are five-to-ten-year
budget items. The High Falls Fire District includes a small portion
of Rosendale with the majority of its boundaries in Marbletown.
In place of discussing the Rondout Creek matter, Chairman Scherrieble
preferred to advocate volunteerism and civic morality, describing satisfaction
that comes with service to fire departments. People dont
understand. Were all on duty 24-hours a day, 365-days a year and
its all volunteer, she passionately stated.
Acquiescing to my request for details regarding the 1999 land sale,
she referred to a 50-page document the High Falls Fire Commissioners
have compiled with a nod to the Freedom of Information Act. An old county
map shows the 9.5 acres of land bordering Bruceville Road beginning
behind the Eggs Nest and stretching to the Camp Huntington property
further up the block. The decision to divest the land, she says, began
over a decade ago, when the Fire District Commissioner of the State
of New York inquired as to why High Falls was holding on to so much
real estate.
Its a liability, she reiterated in assigning the principal
reason for deciding to sell. When I mentioned the prohibition statute
governing public, recreational land, Scherrieble paraphrased Werner:
Look, anybody can sue anybody for anything. A lawsuit (though
it never came to trial) involving someone who jumped in the swimming
hole and ended up with a spinal injury dogged the Fire District for
years. She added, Its not even the dollar factor in the
liability insurance; its the responsibility you have in owning
a piece of property. And its the obligation of the taxpayers of
the district for multi-million dollar lawsuits.
Reviewing the history of the land divestment, Scherrieble cited an exchange
of letters between High Falls Fire District and the state government
dating from 1991. Correspondence continued until 1997, when through
a lawyer named Doug Hunt the District obtained a release from Central
Hudson from the right-of-way easement as well as the clause granting
public-use access. The Fire District ordered an appraisal of the property,
which Scherrieble insists is located on a creeknot a river, a
designation she finds perplexing.
Since any property assessed at over a certain value has to come up for
public referendum, the Fire District posted an announcement to the fact
in the legal notices section of Kingstons Daily Freeman on November
11, 1998. The notice summoned all duly registered residence of
the High Falls Fire District [for] voting on proposition of land located
on Bruceville Road owned by Fire District for a sale of $50,000 or more.
The referendum became part of a December ballot that included voting
for commissioners. At the office of the Kingston paper, Joann Dodig
of the classified department showed me a years worth of logs,
which included several listings from High Falls Fire District, all written
on the same gray stationary with red letterhead. Nothing untoward marked
the listing in question, as the District regularly uses the newpaper
to call for meetings, votes, and referendums as do neighboring towns
and municipalities. Thirteen votes ultimately were cast in response
to the one column (1 3/8 inches) notice in the back of Section C, and
the measure passed. Cross-listed throughout the county, the property
went on the block and stayed there for nearly two years.
Asked about a rumor that local officials were interested in creating
a light-industrial zone (in concert with its bygone history)
further down on the Rondout, Scherrieble insisted, Thats
news to us. We can have business and industryand yes, there are
places where we dont want to have it. We never would have developed
the swimming area. If you check the deed, youll see its
located on a flood plain. Theres only one buildable lot for one
house, the feasibility of which the buyer spent a lot of time researching.
On the subject of the calendar, Elisa Scherrieble maintained, Otto
bought one because a woman pictured in the archive photos, Benita Sermolin,
was a dear friend of his who passed away. The pictures are from a long,
long time ago. It was very different back thena very small, close-knit
community. But then people buy land and your swimming hole and its
gone. While admiring the nice pictures in the calendar,
she admits to taking issue with the tone, which she declined
to qualify, wishing to avoid unintended acrimony. She might have been
referring to a blurb about the Washington Monument, made of Rosendale
cement, which includes the remark: [N]ot even Washington could
have envisaged a day when Rosendale would see its public swimming hole
stolen by public officials and utilities. Scherrieble conceded,
I know everybody moves to the country. Still, you have to have
some kind of progress. But if you wanted to own a piece of that lake
or creek you should have bought it.
The Chairman of the High Falls Fire District Commissioners, emphasizing
that her misunderstood organization is about saving lives and
property related that the recreational area caused headaches over
the years when people came in from out of county and state to use itsome
to light fires and party. Though in recent decades swimming holes have
been bought off and signs posted, she assured that the land was sold
and purchased in good faith. Meanwhile, up at the top of the falls toward
Accord a public boat launch remains. Every parcel weve sold
weve had controversy over. All of us are getting to the point
of asking, When will there be closure on this? And there
should be. Fire Department people are being hassled. (High Falls
fire chief Donald Newell did not return my call, agreeing that Scherrieble
would speak to me on behalf of his organization.)
High Falls realtor Mary Collins, whose office acted as selling agent
for the Fire District, also weighed in on the circumstances surrounding
the swimming hole sale. She recalled that the Commissioners also have
sold property, locks and walks along the canal to the D & H Canal
Society, as well as to other civic and private organizations. Once freed
to sell the Rondout parcel in question, they hired broker and listing
agent Tom Jackson, who advertised the land. A sign went up on
the property but it kept getting stolen, she related. Several
parties, including non-profits such as the Open-Space Institute and
private individuals expressed interest in keeping the land for the public.
One such individual even came in with a check in hand. (Sources say
this was restaurateur Richard Murphy, owner of the Eggs Nest who counts
beautification and preservation of High Falls as part of his business
plan; Murphy reportedly balked at the potential liability associated
with the site as well.)
The property stayed on the market for as long as it did because Central
Hudson took a long time delineating right-of-way. Eventually Kingston
broker Dave Kaplan of RE/MAX Realty Group brought in the buyer, owner
of record Robert Every, who paid a purchase price of $60,000. Collins
also carefully noted that the 6% commission was divided with RE/MAX
and that she shared her 3% ($1,800) with the office staff.
Frankly, we all miss the swimming hole in town and I do too. I
hate that it had to happen, but it was all done legally, and we held
several meetings with brokers, attorneys, and reporters before the sale,
Collins explained. She added that land sales along the Rondout have
been fodder for public debate for decades. For instance, years back,
the town had the opportunity to obtain a huge parcel, including the
waterfalls, but decided it wanted to go into the electric business.
Collins, one of the very first people to buy a Friends of the Roundouts
calendar, characterized the reformers as very good-hearted
people. They have the memory of the place and its hard for
them to give it up.
Robert Every, tax assessor for the town of Olive, told me that for several
years he looked for waterfront property through the Ulster County multiple
listing real estate service, bidding on several. When the Rondout parcel
came up for sale, the selling broker told him it had issues,
including easement and flood plain. I grew up in the town of Olive
and swam with friends there in the 80s. We used to jump off the bridge
near Route 213. I made an offer to purchase, with one buildable lot
for the use of a house. I dont plan on sub-dividing it since approval
is for a single-family dwelling. If I decided to sub-divide, even to
put up a cottage for my parents, Id need approval from the town.
As for the controversy swirling about his property Every maintained,
Most information I get is through letters to the press and indirect
messages. Well meaning groups tried to purchase it before me but they
were afraid of the liability. Asked about the specter of light-industry
along the creek, Every answered, Theres a large lot downstream
from mine with creek frontage. I wouldnt be happy to have light
industry go in there, but if they got the permits I couldnt do
anything about it. Commonsense-wise Id love to see it stay the
way it is. But if zoning changes are proposed I can voice my opinion.
There are other social and cultural issues involved here, but how can
you deny ownership? I didnt conspire with the Fire Company to
buy the land; I was just a guy who walked off the street to discuss
a listing.
Friends of the Rondout organizer Roy Gumpel, who held the first meeting
in his purple barn when no trespassing signs went up on Bruceville Road,
is familiar with the acreage of which Every speaks. Starting from the
premise that there must be a way for us to swim in this river
and own this land, Gumpel and his group are currently seeking
other sites to obtain for public recreational use. They are interested
in parcels on both sides of the creek beginning at the Lucas Turnpike
and ending in High Falls on the Bruceville side. One 80-acre piece sits
on the site of the old sand and gravel company, containing beautiful
ruins and locks. A 100-acre stretch includes historical places, such
as Coxem Cemetery, a Revolutionary War relic still in use today as burial
grounds.
Gumpel wrote a letter to the editor of The Blue Stone Press after the
paper reported that people in Rosendale town governance wanted to see
the property developed for light industry. Voicing concern, he stated,
We have industrial zones up the road in Kingston with fantastic
old buildings with all the property in the world available to you without
the neighbors yelling to leave, but leave Rosendale alone. As
passionate about volunteerism as is Elisa Scheirrible, Gumpel is a firefighter
as well as a green activist. He related, As soon as I bought a
house in the community I ran over and joined the fire department. How
can you not join? Im very honest and up front with my peers about
my feelings on the land and the calendar. He also claimed Otto
Scheirrible as a friend, calling him a great guy.
Gumpel, an internationally respected photographer who has lived in Ulster
County for five years, has worked on television projects for National
Geographic. He is currently shooting a movie about Route 66 in co-operation
with a big Japanese film company and an American producer based on a
long-term photographic essay project. He also works for different ad
agencies in New York City, including doing photographs of jazz musicians
for SONY. Then I return to Ulster County to sit in the fire station
in Accord. I dont know many people who do that, he stated.
Gumpel, whose calendar photos attest to his increasing interest in nature
photography, believes the sale of the swimming hole in part reflects
an anti-outsider mentality towards weekenders and newcomers.
Speaking on behalf of Friends of the Rondout he concluded, We
dont want this to happen again.
Mick Taussig is not convinced that this is the end of the case, stating,
Referendum or no referendum is irrelevant. You need professional,
legal council at a real estate sale. Gerard Carey, a retired law professor
and long-time resident says the property did not belong to the Fire
District but to the people of High Falls. At the sale, there was no
legal representation for the people, though attorneys were present all
around otherwise when they closed.
Asked about opening his own land for public recreation, Taussig said
that it has been private property since the early days of canal construction.
Beside its lack of history as public access space, he claimed it contains
steep, difficult terrain. Offering instead his vision of municipal land
governed for public use, he spoke not in terms of closure but future
outcomes. One such positive outcome would be trading
the swimming hole for the 80 and 100-acre parcels now up for sale. He
observed that High Falls has no drinking water because of toxins
in the aquifers due to light industry [a machine shop] and the federal
government has had to step in. Gumpel holds the view that access
to pristine water and wildlife will attract tourism, appealing to business
interests while maintaining a conservation point of view.
Though at times expending their energies at cross-purposes, participants
on all sides of the Rondout Creek episode seem to share a single message:
Respect our way of doing things and well respect yours, and lets
try to meet in the middle. This makes me think of Town Meeting (still
prominent in New England), where elected, voting members represent their
precincts (contiguous neighborhoods) on matters of local governance
through public assembly, aired on local-access television. I grew up
watching my parents serve as Town Meeting members, and for them, reading
legal notices in the local newspaper was a daily activity, with referendums
on selling or purchasing public land making for topics of dinner conversation.
Under the Town Meeting model of governance, business owners, activists,
reformers and concerned citizens interact with caretakers of municipalities
in open and reasoned dialogue. As one High Falls resident, political
organizer and activist put it, Rosendale is poised to act as a
community that collectively participates in managing our municipalities
and public domains.
To check for referendums, Fire Commissioner elections and other voting
matters in your district, check the legal notices in Kingstons
Daily Freeman. The Rondout Calendar 2001 may be purchased
in High Falls at The Beehive and the Food Co-op, and in Rosendale at
Springtown Greengrocers. Friends of the Rondout may be contacted at
PO Box 342, High Falls, NY, 12440.
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