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History comes alive during Ogdensburg street battle reenactment

History comes alive during Ogdensburg street battle reenactment

Yahoo24-02-2025

Feb. 23—OGDENSBURG — The retorts of muskets and canons echoed through the streets of Ogdensburg as the Fort La Présentation Association and Forsyth's Rifles reenacted the War of 1812's Battle of Ogdensburgh Saturday.
The Battle of Ogdensburgh reenactment took the public back in time on Feb. 22, 1813 when British and Canadian forces crossed the ice-covered St. Lawrence River to confront Americans in what was then the town of Ogdensburgh.
The weekend began Saturday morning with the traditional laying of a wreath on the grave of Sheriff Joseph York at the Ogdensburgh Cemetery on Route 812. Sheriff York commanded a cannon crew of fellow townsmen defending the town.
The battle reenactment began with the British and Canadian forces coming on shore near Riverside Avenue, continuing through the city streets to the corner of Ford and State streets where the battle ends with the capture of Sheriff York and the disbanding of the defenders.
Constance Brown, director of the Sackets Harbor Battlefield State Historic Site, presented "The Significance of Horse Island" at the Ogdensburg History Museum later that afternoon.
On Sunday, the battle reenactment continued at Van Rensselaer Point, also called Lighthouse Point, portraying the attack of the fort itself on Feb. 22, 1813 by British and Canadian forces that results in the retreating of American forces to Sackets Harbor.

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'I got a clearer picture of that cost. The cost of love.' After Socks died, Dill says his family carried the dog's body home and buried him in their backyard. They said a short prayer over his grave, thanking God for Socks' life. They erected a gravestone that stands today as a reminder of their loss. 'Even though it was the right decision to put him down,' Dill tells CNN, 'there's just something surreal about being able to choose whether a creature should live or die.' Taylor had to face the same choice with Brick. When Brick was about eight, he started to decline. He struggled to get to his feet while getting out of bed. He stumbled going downstairs. When Taylor took him for walks, Brick's trot turned into a plod. 'I recognized all these symptoms because I have them myself,' Taylor wrote in his book about pets. Taylor took Brick to the vet. Surgery followed, but the operation revealed a litany of maladies that had damaged the dog's internal organs. His decline accelerated. Despite the pain Brick experienced as he hobbled around the house, he never forgot he was housebroken, never whimpered in self-pity or snapped in anger, Taylor says. Brick's condition eventually became irreversible. When he turned 11, old for a dog, his legs stopped working properly. Taylor and his wife decided to take Brick to a vet so he wouldn't suffer anymore. That same day, Taylor says, something remarkable happened. 'Here's this dog who can barely get onto his feet — but he raided our laundry basket,' Taylor tells CNN. 'He did what he loved to do, which was to pull my underwear from the basket and go hide it in the house. He wanted to play, to challenge us and wanted us to laugh in those hours and not go around weeping.' Does Taylor believe he will see Brick again in the afterlife? Taylor is no pet psychic, but he says he's starting to believe animals have souls. He recalls standing next to a friend's poodle who was being euthanized and 'feeling as something was leaving' the moment the dog died. Where that pet may have gone is a place that Taylor calls the 'Rainbow Bridge.' It's a widely circulated poem for pet owners from an anonymous author that depicts animals romping in a lush celestial meadow where they will eventually reunite with their owners. In one variation of the poem, a writer declares her dog's pawprints will 'be on my heart forever.' 'It's very moving because it acknowledges that heaven — whatever heaven is — is not just limited to people,' Taylor says. 'Anyone we love, including a turtle that has lived 90 years, has value that cannot be limited by its physical presence.' In death, Brick left Taylor one final lesson. 'I'm learning from him (Brick) that everything, in the end, boils down to relationships,' Taylor says. 'Brick had no possessions. He was never elected leader of the pack. But he had wonderful relationships. He died knowing he was deeply loved. 'I couldn't ask any more for myself.' John Blake is a CNN senior writer and author of the award-winning memoir, 'More Than I Imagined: What a Black Man Discovered About the White Mother He Never Knew.'

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