As
I was researching the Town of Baldwin for its upcoming exhibit (on display August 1, 2019-January 31, 2020), the town historian
showed me an article written in 1959 about how the town almost dissolved in
1923. In the early 1920s, the town began paving many of the roads within its
limits to make them more suitable for increasing automobile traffic. I can see
the logic that improved roads might bring more people and businesses into the
town, but the municipality was already unstable financially. The budget was
unbalanced, there were no reserve funds, and the taxes were high. Adding the
cost of paving on top of the general cost of maintaining 63 miles of roads and
numerous bridges pushed Baldwin deeper into debt. There were no major
industries, stores, utilities, or even a railroad line in the town, so the tax
burden fell heavily onto farmers.
Aerial view of the village of North Chemung in the Town of Baldwin, c. 1950s |
One
week later, on May 22, another article in the Star-Gazette reported that a petition was presented to the county
Board of Supervisors. The petition read as follows:
The undersigned, residents and freeholders of the
Town of Baldwin, your county, respectfully petition that your Board take such
action as will bring about the annexation of the said Town of Baldwin to the
Town of Chemung, in your county, or that the said Town of Baldwin be so
partitioned that a part thereof may be set off to each of the Towns of Erin,
Van Etten and Chemung in your county, and that your board will take such action
as will accomplish this result.
The
article then listed 100+ names of Baldwin residents who supported the petition.
Star-Gazette headline, May 22, 1923 |
An
editorial appearing in the newspaper on the same day explained how the petition
was unlikely to succeed. “Changing long established town boundaries or
discontinuing towns entirely and incorporating them with other towns is an
extremely hard thing to do,” it stated. Beyond the legal and logistical issues
of such a drastic change, Baldwin had the highest taxes in the county (higher
even than the city of Elmira). No other town would willingly take on that
burden. As a result, the petition quietly died in committee.
This
effort by the Town of Baldwin was not for nothing, however. By presenting such
a sweeping demand before the Board of Supervisors, the town pushed the county
into honestly considering the tax problems it was facing. For years, Elmira had
been helping Baldwin cover its tax shortfalls as no other solutions had been
implemented. After the petition for dissolution was presented, the board
approved a county-wide tax levy that provided $2,000 (around $30,000 today) to
Baldwin to help ease its residents’ suffering.
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