Currently
88°F
Mostly Cloudy
  • Today
    83°F 57°F
    Scattered Thunderstorms
  • Tomorrow
    63°F 51°F
    Showers/Wind
  • Sun
    67°F 54°F
    AM Showers
  • Mon
    77°F 61°F
    Partly Cloudy
  • FORECAST BROUGHT TO YOU BY


    Isaac Heating &
    Air Conditioning

Craig Colony history to be documented

The administration building at the Craig Colony for Epileptics at Sonyea. From museum of disability.org

LEICESTER, NY — Leicester Town Historian Tom Roffe has been given a state archives grant to do research on the Craig Colony for Epileptics in Sonyea.

“This history has been not only crucial to our local heritage but neglected for far too long,” Roffe said. “What material remains available is scattered and obscure, including the photographic documentation.”

Roffe’s research is being funded under the L. Hackman Research Residency program, which annually awards about a dozen applicants a grant to come to Albany and work with staff guidance in the New York State Archives special collections. Roffe believes he is the only town historian in western New York ever to have been given this opportunity.

In the late 1800s the living conditions and treatment for the afflicted were deplorable. Through the compassionate vision of William Prior Letchworth, the progressive Craig Colony facility was established.

The first patients arrived in 1895 and were placed in an environment conducive to healthy living and exercise. It was the first community of its type in New York State.

The facility was also important for the economic opportunities it provided for the workers: the Irish and Italian immigrants and their first born American children who obtained job security, pensions, a dependable income and a productive family future. Furthermore, agriculture gained a valuable, progressive medical resource with the colony’s educated professionals and schools.

Roffe’s concentration of study will be the years of the colony’s development and treatment methods up to 1950, after which modern medications and clinical advancements altered methods previously considered beneficial.

Roffe noted that, from almost the first decade of the colony’s opening until it closed in the 1980’s, he has had family and relatives who worked at the colony.

Roffe will be grateful to talk with anyone that can provide information to further his understanding of the Craig community.

He would like to examine any documents and photographs. For interested groups or organizations, he would be happy to present a power point show and history-based lecture.

Roffe can be reached at 221 Main St, Leicester, NY. 14481; or call 382-3234.

4 Responses to Craig Colony history to be documented
  1. Darlene Gordon
    July 27, 2010 | 9:48 am

    My mom and dad lived there for 20 years i would love to know more about this place my parents never talked about it they are both deceased now

    Report abusive comments

  2. Larry Lenahan
    August 5, 2010 | 1:35 pm

    I am the grandson of one of residents Geore Crane, who died at Craig Colony in 1934 and am very interested in learning about your research. Will you have access to any other patient’s records? If so, what restrictions have been placed one your ability to share the information. I am not interested in the treatments that he specifically received, althouh I am interested in the overall level of care. My primary interest is genealogical, i.e. – cause of his epilepsy, if any indication of a cause, such as head injury, and information about his occupations, his parents and who made the arrangements for his admission. Should wish to speak with me, please free to call me at 845/628-6229.

    Respectfully yours,
    Lawrence J. Lenahan

    Report abusive comments

  3. Tim Donnelly
    August 14, 2010 | 9:21 pm

    I am attempting to determine in the Michael Donnelly buried in the Craig Colony Cemetery is my fathers uncle. I do believe he is. He would of been born in 1877.
    I don’t know if it would be possible to determine this but perhaps another Donnelly family may be able to exclude him.
    I hope the research is fruitful to all seeking “missing” family members from a time when some matters were just not talked about.
    Thank you.
    Tim Donnelly

    Report abusive comments

  4. Yolanda Leavy
    August 27, 2010 | 8:10 pm

    My Aunt Mildred Florio was a patient at Craig Colony from Sep 4, 1934 until her death on Aug 11, 1943; she was 23 years old. I would love any information that is available. All I have is a photo of her next to two nurses and a piece of a quilt that I was told she made.

    Many thanks.

    Report abusive comments

Leave a Reply


Wanting to leave an <em>phasis on your comment?

Trackback URL http://thelcn.com/blog/2010/02/06/craig-colony-history-to-be-documented/trackback/