Friday, April 17, 2026

Let's start Thinking about our Community

The best remembered and photographed times in Eaton were the “field days” held yearly to celebrate the Fourth of July and now Memorial Day!  This community, born out of Revolutionary blood felt it was a duty to put on big yearly celebration. These founders came from mostly Massachusetts and served in the Revolutionary War before their move here to New York

In keeping with those days the Old Town of Eaton Museum will be hosting Memorial Day and the 250th Anniversary of America...and we are trying to make it a special day that will bring people together as a community!  It is indeed needed in these times of trouble for the poor, the elderly, workers and the many. Let us celebrated the past and look forward to better times, honoring the War Veterans of all our wars.

In those days "The big day" usually started with cannon volley, which in later years is remembered as Patty Miles “firing” his anvil.  This was done by filling the hole in the bottom of the anvil with black powder and setting it off.  Any late sleepers would be awakened if their children had not already forced them out of bed in their excitement to get downtown.



Horse racing was part of the day and baseball games were played in different fields around town, big rivals for Eaton’s team was the Bouckville Bucks.  Food was available everywhere from the churches where the ladies aid put on a dinner, to the food stands on Main Street (front street) and the hotels, some brought their own lunches, but everybody ate.

The "Town" filled with music with people listening, especially when the Eaton Military Band played. In the evening there was always a dance that was well attended at the opera house in town, and the Rebekah Lodge usually served coffee to the attendees, with the dance continuing until midnight.

By the 1920’s, the world was at war; the steam engine plant was closing, water power had given away to electricity, woolen mills were closed, the Chenango Canal had ceased to be a transportation route and was only used to fill the Erie Canal, the “Great Depression” was on and the march to the city for work began.
 

No more does the anvil fire, and only once every three years is there a parade in Eaton  on Memorial Day,  (instead of Field Day on the Fourth of July). In Eaton, however the memories live on in this rural community, remembered most of all for its once glorious past replete with famous Eatonites, famous inventions and stories of the wars. Eaton like so many of its rural counterparts has gone to Sleep!


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