Discover Village of Colonie - May 2022

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Discover Village of Colonie

May 11 - May 17, 2022 | COLONIE SPOTLIGHT

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n LOCAL HISTORY

A little slice of community Colonie Little League’s 57-year partnership with village pays big dividends By JOHN McINTYRE mcintyrej@spotlightnews.com COLONIE - Little League baseball in communities across the county reflects a sense of Americana as the words “play ball” ring out from behind home plate each spring. The Village of Colonie and its relationship with Colonie Little League takes that reflection one step further because of the synergy between the village and the area’s young players. Each spring, for at least 35 years, the village closes the roads around

Continues inside

Top: Opening Day 2022 at Cook Park on April 23. Jim Franco / Spotlight News Above: Opening day of the Colonie Little League on June 4, 1955 at Exchange Park just off Wolf Road where DeNooyer Chevrolet is today. Photo provided by Milt Schmidt

Left: The Opening Day parade in the Village of Colonie on April 23. Jim Franco / Spotlight News


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COLONIE SPOTLIGHT | May 11 - May 17, 2022

Discover Village of Colonie

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Colonie’s little Partnership Cook Park on Opening Day so residents and parents can line a parade route to the league’s fields nestled in the southwest corner of the park. “We had at least 1,000 people in the park this year,” Colonie Little League President Rodger Wyland said. “It really is a big deal. We had 10-15 dignitaries and about 400 kids.” On Saturday, April 23, the UAlbany Marching Band led fire trucks and the young players to the five fields that abut the CSX rail line that defines the Village’s southern boundary to hold opening ceremonies. Just like most Opening Day ceremonies, Colonie teams packed the field before games began. One moment that stood out was

the honoring of volunteers that passed during the off season. This year the league honored Kevin Kopach, who served for 27 years and past league President Dennis Mihalski, who gave 14 years to local baseball. “We have such strong support from people in our community and it is year after year,” Wyland said. This tradition runs deep in Colonie, all the way back to the league’s formation in 1955 and its survival as the town experienced explosive economic growth. History of youth baseball Baseball teams existed in the area in the early 1900s, but they were run by local businesses and outside of a formal league. It wasn’t until 1939 Little League baseball

The Tobin’s First Prize team during the Colonie Little League’s inaugural season in 1955. First row from left, Ronnie Beecher, John Hotaling, Bernard Scanton, Frank Myers, Tim Dennis, Henry Dennis and Bobby Foggo. Second row, Dick Johnson, Gerald Bylsma, Larry Tull, Art Waugh, Wally Burns and Bill Giering. formed in Williamsport, Pennsylvania and spread to the Capital District in 1953. “Before 1955, there were teams that would find a field and play, but there wasn’t the consistency,” Colonie Little League Historian Milt Schmidt said. “The original organizers decided to join

Photo provided by Milt Schmidt because of the rules and structure of Little League.” Charles Thum smacked three hits and Joe DiGiulia hit two to lead Rutland Lumber past Tim’s Trotters, 6-5 in the first Colonie Little League game on June 4, 1955. The games were played at Exchange Park, just

off Wolf Road where DeNooyer Chevrolet is currently located, on land owned by the Bergbold family, but the development of Wolf Road disrupted and displaced baseball. Luckily, a forward thinking village came to the rescue by using that same growth to find a place the Colonie Little League could call home. The construction of the Adirondack Northway created an opportunity because a piece of land was cut off and not accessible to the city of Albany. It was perfect for a recreation area. In July 1964, the Village Board of Trustees negotiated with the City of Albany to purchase 27 acres to create Cook Park. Then Mayor William Cook, for whom the park is named, also asked for volunteers to clear the trees on the property to make way for the athletic fields. A local development firm, John T. Garry, Inc, built the

road to the park at no cost. At the same time, then Colonie Little League President Fred McDonald, saved $12,000 in reserves. He figured the league would need it when its lease on the Wolf Road field expired and wasn’t renewed. In the mid 1960s the partnership with the village began and a new home at Cook Park took shape. The village board voted to lease four acres of land on Oct. 25, 1965 to Colonie Little League for $5 per year. That fee has now risen to $50, according to Schmidt. Working together is the secret sauce that makes youth baseball in Colonie successful on the field and in the community. “I worked closely with [Village Mayor] Frank Leak and he was so supportive and now Mayor [Thomas]Tobin has picked up where he left off,” Wyland said. “For them it is all about the kids. It always has been. Whatever

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May 11 - May 17, 2022 | COLONIE SPOTLIGHT

Discover Village of Colonie

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Parents and coaches walk with teams from the Colonie Little League during the Opening Day arade on April 23. we asked for, they never said no.” An example of this partnership in action was the installation of lights at Cook Park. “We put up lights about 20 years ago on our field. We worked it out with the mayor and the village board to get it done,” Schmidt said. “There was some concern about light

Jim Franco/ Spotlight News leaking outside the park, but we worked together to make sure it would not be a problem.” According to Schmidt, the mayor personally visited residents who had concerns about the project and made sure they were heard. Now the lights come on every Friday night for baseball.

Success on the field A few years after the move to the new facilities, players from Colonie reached the top of the Little League world. “In 1973 the first team from Colonie made it to the Little League World Series,” Schmidt said. “That is when we made it to the national spotlight. It is a very big deal.” That tradition continues today, including a Colonie team winning the New York State Little League title last year. Those players returned to the field and the parade to be honored, but Wyland says it doesn’t start with championships. “We have been fortunate that way, in terms of winning at the regional and state level, but you do not do that well without having strong programs at the lower levels,” he said. “We want to make sure this is right for our rec league players, not just the travel leagues.” This is evident by the

10 t-ball teams this year and that the league does not charge to participate at that level. This season there are 37 teams total in the league. “You want to run a league with dedicated people and it has been like this forever,” Wyland said, referring to the 40 volunteer Board of Directors and 15 Executive Board members that run the league. The Colonie Little League mission is funded by the local business community through sponsorships. There is a waiting list to sponsor a team. “Our sponsorships (from the community) have been really incredible year over year,” He said. “Honestly, we couldn’t be as good as we are without their support.” The support also allowed for the creation of the Challenger League for athletes with disabilities. This season, 37

Local businesses sponsored baseball teams in the early 1900s like this one from Campbell’s Farm from 1939. The Capital District did not have a formal Little League until 1953. disabled athletes currently participate in the program that make up two teams. “We provide assistance to those kids to allow everyone to enjoy the game of baseball,” Schmidt said. The program pairs the major division players with

Photo courtesy of Mark Platt challenger team members. “Our major teams come down on Saturday morning to be buddies with the challenger athletes,” Wyland said. “It really changes lives on both sides. You should really see it. It is amazing.”

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COLONIE SPOTLIGHT | May 11 - May 17, 2022

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One year late, the village celebrates

By JIM FRANCO francoj@spotlightnews.com

COLONIE — 100 +1. That is the theme of the Village of Colonie’s centennial celebration. Technically, the 3.3-square-mile village in the heart of the Capital District was incorporated on March 2, 1921. But as with every other aspect of life since the pandemic took hold in 2020, things surrounding the village’s centennial celebration had to be … adjusted. Last year, out of an abundance of caution and an unpredictable virus that continued to wreak havoc on the globe, plans were postponed. As such, the village will officially kick off its centennial celebration (+1) a year late on March 14 with an open house at the village office complex behind the fire house on Central Avenue.

It may be a year delayed, but the sentiment surrounding the celebration is the same. “COVID-19 delayed the events until 2022, and although the village is now one year older, we can celebrate safely with all our family and friends,” said Mayor Thomas Tobin. “In preparing for this Centennial, we have been focused on honoring our past, celebrating the present and imagining the future.” The village is bisected by the busiest section of Central Avenue, from the east side

of Route 155 to the west side of Wolf Road. At its widest point, roughly north to south, it extends from the Guilderland town line to Sunset Boulevard along Sand Creek Road. According to the 2020 census, the village has 7,781 residents down slightly from 7,793 a decade earlier living in 2,860 households. It is intricately intertwined with the Town of Colonie but it incorporated 25 years after the town did in 1895 and has its own government complete with an elected mayor,

Board of Trustees and governmental departments and boards — it takes care of its own parks, picks up its own trash, oversees its own planning and zoning and levies its own taxes. Over the years, village government has gone to great lengths to provide for its own including offering senior and youth services, an amphitheater and at Christmas Santa Claus hops on a fire truck to tour every neighborhood in the village and every April the Easter Bunny takes the same tour aboard the same fire truck. “Along with the Board of Trustees, I am grateful for the spirit of community that continues to make the Village of Colonie “A Place to be Proud Of,’” Tobin said. Hours of work went into planning the centennial celebration, and they had an extra year to

work on it. The activities and events are as follows: • Centennial Open House: Saturday, May 14, from noon to 4 p.m. The kick-off event welcomes all residents and friends to the Village Hall Complex and there will be tours through the HBK Senior Center, Village Hall, Family Recreation Center, Department of Public Works and the fire house. • Centennial Picnic: Saturday, July 16 from noon to 5 p.m. The event will be at the village’s signature park, Cook Park located off Lincoln Avenue. The picnic is an extended annual Family Fun Day and will include food, games, kids’ bike rodeo and live music. • Mayor’s Cup 5K & Fun Run: Saturday, Aug. 13, with the 5K starting at 9 a.m. and the fun run

kicking off at 9:45 a.m. The races will be held at Cook Park and surrounding neighborhoods and they will be timed by ARE Event Productions. • Centennial Parade: Saturday, Sept. 17. The parade kicks off at 1 p.m. at Jupiter Lane and marches down Central Avenue to Lincoln Avenue and into Cook Park. It will feature dignitaries, fire departments, floats and marching bands. • Centennial Dinner: Saturday, Oct. 8. The 100+1 celebration will culminate with a dinner reception at the Italian American Community Center on Washington Avenue Extension. It will begin at 6 p.m. and reservations are required. It will feature a Roaring 20’s theme in recognition of when the village was officially founded.

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May 11 - May 17, 2022 | COLONIE SPOTLIGHT

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11

The Village of

Colonie

Centennial

100 Years of

“A Place to be Proud Of ”

1921 - 2021

The Village of Colonie is proud to celebrate its Centennial Anniversary! As we turn 100 +1, we plan to celebrate this historic milestone with our entire community throughout the summer. Join us as we honor our past, celebrate the present and imagine the future!

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