On January 27, 1897, a sailor named John Dolan was fined $3 in the Essex Market Police Court for being drunk in public. During his arraignment, he carried a tiny pet kitten under his coat.
Archive for January, 2020
1897: The Sailor’s Kitten That Escaped From the Essex Market Prison
Posted: 27th January 2020 by The Hatching Cat in Cat Stories, Cats in the MewsTags: Cats of Old New York, Essex Market Police Court, Herman C. Kudlich, John Dolan, Mrs. C.L. King, New York City History
1909: The Half-Starved Kitten Rescued by a Sailor-Policeman in Mott Haven
Posted: 25th January 2020 by The Hatching Cat in Cat Stories, Cats in the MewsTags: 40th Precinct, Cats of Old New York, Joe Post, Mott Haven, New York City History
On this day in history, the Alexander Avenue police station in the Mott Haven section of the Bronx acquired a new mascot–a half-starved, black and white kitten rescued by a sailor-policeman,
1899: Eurita, the Midtown Manhattan Cat That Was Sent Through the Mail
Posted: 24th January 2020 by The Hatching Cat in Cat Stories, Cats in the MewsTags: Cats of Old New York, Grand Central Palace, New York City History, postal cats
On January 24, 1899, a cat sprang out of a mail pouch after it had been unlocked at Branch Post Office H on Lexington Avenue and 44th Street. The unexpected contents gave the postal employees quite the surprise.
1881: The Jail Cats of Edward Reinhardt, the Silver Lake Murderer Hanged on Staten Island
Posted: 15th January 2020 by The Hatching Cat in Cat StoriesTags: Annie Degnan, Edward Reinhardt, New York City History, Richmond County Jail, Silver Lake, Staten Island history
On the night before he was hung for the murder of one of his two wives, Edward Reinhardt spent time smoking cigars and petting the three cats that lived with him in his prison cell at the Richmond County Jail.
1908: The Widow of Yorkville Who Shared Her Ramshackle Mansion with 23 Cats and Dogs
Posted: 4th January 2020 by The Hatching Cat in Cat Stories, Crazy Cat LadiesTags: Angelica Schuyler Reed, Bide-a-Wee, Captain Edward Dunscome, Metropolitan Republican Club, Milne Parker, New York City History, Yorkville
In 1908, a member of Old New York’s most aristocratic families was evicted from a ramshackle mansion on East 83rd Street in Yorkville, where she had been barely surviving with her 15 dogs and 8 cats. @Bideawee