Chautauqua County "Stuff"

The following letter from our classmate David Olson..."Oley", was published Saturday, July 12, 2025 in the Post Journal.

 

Hope for Jamestown

 

I've come back to visit my roots and am staying in a friend's home on Lower Swede Hill.  I grew up in Jamestown, graduated from JHS, and then went off to college.  Like most of my friends, I settled elsewhere.  I've lived in Tacoma Washington since 1974 and visited Jamestown only infrequently.  During this visit, I was dismayed at the empty downtown, abandoned houses, and crumbling manufacturing facilities.  Jamestown is no different from thousands of small, once-prosperous American cities, be they timber towns, mill towns, mining towns, or farm towns.  At one time they were wonderful places to live.  I loved growing up in Jamestown during the fifties and sixties when the town was thriving.  

 The first few days of my visit were depressing, but then I began to see the potential of Jamestown.  There are some wonderful neighborhoods in the city. I lived on Hotchkiss Street and it looks great.  Jamestown has great architecture, much more interesting than the cookie-cutter burbs sprouting up in the West and the South.  Even in the worst neighborhoods, I see well-maintained, lovely homes.

 The city has acres of green spaces which is lacking in many booming cities of our country, much of this is where homes and factories once stood.  Greenery, be it manicured or left to mother nature, is good for one's soul. The Chadakoin River now runs free and clear from Warner Dam. I saw turtles and fish in the river, and osprey flying above,  Yes, there's a bit of trash in it and I'd check with the health department before I ate any fish from it, but it is not the industrial sewer it was when I lived here.  

 I went to the Library's block party which was a hive of activity.  The area is fortunate to have a strong library system.  The municipal band still gives concerts in Allen Park. 

 The county is one of the loveliest places in America with rolling hills, lakes, and woodlands.  If you want true wilderness, the Allegheny National Forest is a short drive away.

There are few counties that offer as much year-round recreation as Chautauqua County. 

 Jamestown has lost a lot, and much of it won't come back.  One thing that just about every place in America has lost is community.  I recommend reading Robert Putnam's prescient essay "Bowling Alone" to understand what has happened throughout America.  When I was growing up most men were in service clubs and families attended lodge functions.  It seemed that everyone was a member of a church.  In the factories, workers grumbled and complained yet formed a bond.  They had a sense of purpose and made quality goods.  I worked at Dahlstroms in the summer where we made the Cadillac of elevator cabs.

 A strong sense of community can offset the despair that settles on a city when its economy turns down.  Community is something that doesn't need prosperity, government services, or economic investment.  It just takes a bit of willingness to get to know one another.  My neighborhood in Tacoma has a great sense of community.  It started a few years ago when one of the residents had a potluck barbecue out on his front lawn, and invited the neighbors.  It has become a twice-monthly event and we've come together over a hundred times. We don't talk politics or religion but joke around, discuss what's happening in the neighborhood, and share our stories. We laugh a lot.  I now host an outdoor winter solstice party around a bonfire that features Glogg made with spices from Peterson's Farm Stand. - I enforce a two-drink limit - I don't want my neighbors to wake up with terrible hangovers on December 22nd.  Now we know each other, help each other, and trust each other.  It was so simple yet it has increased the quality of our lives immeasurably.

 If I lived in the place where I'm vacationing, I'd buy a bunch of hot dogs and marshmallows, set up a barbecue on the vacant lot across the street, invite the neighbors to bring some food to share, and just talk with one another.  I'd eventually try to get the conversation focused on how we can help our neighborhood.  I'm sure we'd begin to care about our minuscule part of the planet and get together to make improvements, like picking up trash in vacant spaces. There's much neighbors can do to improve their blocks.  As blocks improve, the city begins to look better.  Despair can give way to pride. 

 Jamestown, because it is a small city can build back its sense of community.  It will take time, but it is a way for even the poorest residents to contribute to the rebirth of Jamestown. There are too many good things here and it would be a shame to let the city languish. 

 


David Olson

JHS "100 Years of Music"
MAYVILLE
MAYVILLE

Yes, we had a lot of snow this year!!

 
Watershed Notes: 

Chautauqua County's Latitude -

What Makes Our Location So Unique?
 
 
Article by Bethany O'Hagan,

Chautauqua Watershed Conservancy Land Specialist
 
Our Geographical Location: The 42nd Parallel

 

Have you ever wondered why plants and animals thrive the way they do here in Chautauqua County? After moving here, I took a dive deep into learning about local geography and the county’s natural surroundings. As a geography graduate, maps are a fascination of mine, and I couldn’t resist exploring the 42nd parallel north, the line of latitude where Jamestown lies. It made me wonder how our location compares to others along the same parallel.

 

What is the 42nd Parallel, and Why Does It Matter?

 

The 42nd parallel north is an imaginary line that circles the Earth. It spans roughly 16,104 miles, making it about 64% of the length of the equator. Jamestown sits at approximately 42 degrees 5' 43.9” N, 79 degrees 14' 18.9” W. This latitude doesn’t just show our position – it also connects us with several cities across the United States and beyond. Let’s take a closer look at some of the places that share this parallel.

 

What Cities Share Our Latitude?

Erie, Pennsylvania
Ames, Iowa
Marshalltown, Iowa
Kalamazoo, Michigan
Benton Harbor, Michigan
Braintree, Massachusetts
Medford, Oregon
 

While these cities may lie along the same line of latitude, their climates and characteristics differ because of geographical and environmental factors. Let’s see how these places vary, even with the same parallel.

 

Different Climates, Same Latitude

 

One of the most surprising things about the 42nd parallel is how diverse the climates can be along this line:

Medford, Oregon sits in the Rogue Valley between the Cascade Range and Siskiyou Mountains. It has a Mediterranean climate, with warm summers and mild winters – much warmer than expected for a place on this parallel.
Ames, Iowa experiences a humid continental climate, with hot, humid summers and cold, snowy winters – typical of the Midwest.
Benton Harbor, Michigan also shares this climate, but its proximity to Lake Michigan means higher snowfall due to lake-effect snow.
Braintree, Massachusetts, just south of Boston, has a similar humid continental climate, with warm, humid summers and cold, rainy winters.
 

Despite sharing the same latitude, each of these places has distinct weather patterns influenced by nearby mountains, bodies of water, and other factors.

 

Global Connections: Water, Water Everywhere

 

Along the 42nd parallel, many regions are connected by an abundance of freshwater, just like Chautauqua County. For example:

Heaven Lake, a volcanic crater lake in Korea, is located along the 42nd parallel.
The Caspian Sea, the world’s largest inland body of water, sits along this line.
Hokkaido, Japan, is also on the 42nd parallel and is known for its lakes and rivers.
 

What makes Chautauqua County especially notable is the freshwater around us – Lake Erie to the north and Lake Michigan to the west. We’re part of a region rich in freshwater, a resource that’s becoming more valuable worldwide.

 

Why Chautauqua County is Special

 

While many places share our latitude, our area stands out for a few key reasons. First, the sheer amount of freshwater surrounding us is unparalleled. Chautauqua County is nestled between the Great Lakes, offering us a wealth of water resources including our unique watershed that many regions around the world can only dream of. Our climate, influenced by proximity to Lake Erie and the surrounding hills, offers moderate summers, snowy winters, and fertile soil – ideal for agriculture and outdoor activities. It’s not going to take long for the rest of the world to see how lucky we are. 

 


Next time you look at a map, remember that the 42nd parallel does more than mark our location – it connects us to a world full of similarities, differences, and natural wonders. It makes me appreciate everything here so much more.