Latest Hubs · by William F. Torpey · tagged yonkers RSS icon



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62

Game Raises Questions

by William F. Torpey

In August of 1986 a U.S. postal worker in Edmund, Okla., killed 15 colleagues. In the decade following incidents of "crazed mass violence" by postal workers took place at an alarming rate -- They even made a game about it! published 3 months ago

6 comments    video games irs usps

Amtrak train Northbound on the old New Haven Line63

Railroads Trying for Comeback

by William F. Torpey

The heyday of our nation's passenger trains, when railroad travelers were treated like royalty, may be a distant memory to many of us, but Amtrak has been making a valiant effort to make a comeback -- despite a constant battle over routes and budgets. published 5 months ago

7 comments    travel amtrak trip planning

Norwalk Museum in South Norwalk, formerly Norwalk City Hall 62

Counsel for the Council

by William F. Torpey

When the city fathers put together Norwalk's city charter in 1913, they did a pretty darn good job! I didn't think so initially when I began covering Norwalk politics for The Hour newspaper in late 1968, but I've long since changed my mind. published 6 months ago

0 comments    norwalk yonkers jennie f. cave

U.S. Rep. Christopher Shays, 4th Congressional District, Connecticut64

Mea Culpa, Mea Culpa, Mea Culpa

by William F. Torpey

I learned early in life there is a chasm between Democrats and Republicans that's impossible to cross over. If you're a Democrat, you can't sit by and watch people suffer. If you're a Republican, you merely declare, "If I made it, so can you; fend for yourself." published 7 months ago

4 comments    politics democrats republicans

Ella Fitzgerald, a former Yonkers resident65

The (Good) Old Days Weren't So Bad After All

by William F. Torpey

Yonkers, N.Y., was a bustling community in the '30s and '40s when I grew up. It was a great city, once known as "The City of Gracious Living." Recently, however, I read in the New York Times that it's now sometimes referred to as "Beirut-on-the-Hudson." published 9 months ago

2 comments    history inspiration radio

Riverfest 2007 Downtown Yonkers by the Hudson River61

Those Lessons They Never Taught Us in School

by William F. Torpey

This story relates how a big brother who didn't make it to high school or collegen -- through his own innate common sense -- taught me, his little brother, who graduated from high school and college, more than any teacher or professor. published 10 months ago

4 comments    education school inspiration

Delegates to the Philadelphia convention of 1787 sign the newly written Constitution in this 1940 painting by Howard Chandler Christy. These men are often referred to as the "Founding Fathers." (Painting by Howard Chandler Christy, ctsy. U.S. House o70

Preserve Our Constitution

by William F. Torpey

Why is it that so many of us feel that the rights and responsibilities we inherited from our forefathers may be, despite our reverence for the U.S. Constitution, in serious jeopardy? published 10 months ago

7 comments    politics law constitution

The trolley, in 1886, replaces the only public transportation in Yonkers, a horse–drawn stage coach operating between Getty Square and Mount Vernon.62

Naked Emperor

by William F. Torpey

"Clang, clang, clang, went the trolley ..." The words of that old familiar song bring memories, to me, of the wartime 1940s in Yonkers, N.Y. That city, more hilly than the "city by the bay," boasted trolley cars until the early '50s when buses (all in one day) took their place. published 11 months ago

11 comments    satire parody transportation

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