Not a member?
JOIN HERE
Find and click on your name.

WHO'S ONLINE NOW


No registered users are online right now.

PROFILE UPDATES


•   Robert Edward Walter  11/15
•   Norman William Cleesattel (Cleesattel)  10/28
•   Spencer Mark Lazar  7/21
•   Marcia Tanner (Carr)  7/17
•   Ronald William Vecchio  7/13
•   Ronald Martin Gross  6/20
•   Colleen Callahan (Frye)  5/17
•   Suzanne L. (Sue) Schnake (Yale)  4/22
•   Betty Gierlak (Duszynski)  4/20
•   William Charles "Bill" Dunlop  3/5
Show More

WHERE WE LIVE


Who lives where - select from the dropdown to find out.


UPCOMING BIRTHDAYS



•   James Henderson Foggin  12/12
•   Diane Annette Stevens (Elliott)  12/18
•   Dennis D, Kowalchuk  12/21
•   Joan Elizabeth Nangle (Hanley)  12/23
•   Joel Aaron Ross  12/23
•   Lynn Susan Zimmerman (Beman)  12/23
•   Christine A. Klementowski (Eberhard)  12/25
•   David Paul Gracie  1/6
•   Dennis Alfred Woodard  1/6

WHERE ARE THEY NOW


MISSING CLASSMATES


Know the email address of a missing Classmate? Click here to contact them!

JOINED CLASSMATES


Percentage of Joined Classmates: 58.9%

A:   251   Joined
B:   175   Not Joined
(totals do not include deceased)

IN MEMORY UPDATES


•   Roger Bron Fik  2024
•   George G. (Jerry) Myers  1992
•   Frankie Ann Logan (Brown)  2024
•   Robert T. Rosen  2017
•   Marshall Allan Harnick  2017
•   Bertram James Pritchard  2021
•   Sharon Irene Eberhardt (Jackson)  2024
•   Joseph G. Blackledge  1981
•   Patricia Joan Mitchell (Hubble)  2024
•   Peter David Bisgeier  2024
Show More

Kenmore West Senior High School
Class Of 1960
ANNOUNCEMENTS

The scholarship winner for 2024 is Taylor Rubach

 

 

 

 

 

For those of you who did not have the opportunity to donate to the 2024 scholarship fund, we have started our campaign for 2025 and are accepting donations toward that goal.    Please consider donating so we may continue to fund the Kenmore West Class of 1960 David Hight Scholarship Fund.

Please be aware individual donations were down for 2022 and 2023 and 2024  If this trend continues, we will not be able to sustain our signature scholarship of Kenmore West Class of 1960 David Hight Scholarship.

 

Checks to be made out to: 

Kenmore West Class of 1960 (and marked Scholarship) and mailed to:

 

Dianne Logan Weinert

135 Fairways Blvd.

Williamsville, New York 14221

       

The Village of Kenmore is "Buffalo's First Suburb". Following the Civil War, the City of Buffalo's population grew tremendously. With the invention of electric streetcars, people were able to live outside of walking distance from their jobs. By 1888, L.P.A. Eberhardt purchased land just north of the Buffalo border and began to build a home.Churches were erected beginning in 1891 and the first Village store was opened in 1897.

The first school was erected in 1892. The Kenmore Union School was built where the Municipal Building now stands. The school was utilized until 1911 when the Washington School was opened.

In 1889, the Village boasted a horse-drawn omnibus, which ran up and down Delaware Avenue at no charge to passengers. Lots sold for $250.00 and by 1890 nearly 300 people called Kenmore home. There were no sidewalks, streetlights or sewers. Drinking water was scarce and there were only dirt roads.

By 1899, the Village had enough residents to qualify for legal incorporation. 313 persons signed the proposition calling for incorporation. An election was held and the Village was incorporated on September 5, 1899.

The Fire Department was established in 1903 and the Kenmore Police Department was created in 1919.

 

HOW DID THE VILLAGE OF KENMORE GET ITS NAME?

Former Village Historian, Frederick Parkhurst, explained how the Village was named “Kenmore” in his 1925 book, History of Kenmore. The book explains that Louis Eberhardt, known as the Father of Kenmore, opposed naming the Village “Eberhardt”.  He was responsible for buying up farmland and subdividing the property into a suburban development.  The building which is portrayed on the Village logo is of the Eberhardt  Mansion, located at the corner of Delaware Avenue and Kenmore Avenue.  

The following is an excerpt from Mr. Parkhurst’s book:  

It was proposed calling the village "Eberhardt" ; but firmly 
and modestly Mr. Eberhardt said, "No, they might nickname it 
'Dutchtown'." But the real reason was Mr. Eberhardt's aversion
to personal publicity and display. The Erie Railroad was 
building a station at this time in the north-east section of 
Buffalo near Main Street and had chosen the name "Kenmore", 
but Mr. Eberhardt with an ear for euphony, appropriated 
the name for the fast growing community and the name 
"Kensington" was attached to the Erie Station. A sign bearing 
the name "KENMORE" was placed at the intersection of Delaware 
and Kenmore Avenues, where all who ran might read. 

There are several places called Kenmore in the United States, 
notably Kenmore in Fairfax County, Va., the home of Washington’s 
sister, and a village in Ohio. Probably both these 
places, our own village, and other places so named, took their 
name from a small island on the south-west coast of Ireland; 
or from a village in Scotland.



VILLAGE HISTORIAN: Ed Adamczyk

http://www.villageofkenmore.org/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 




 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

For those of you who did not have the opportunity to donate to the 2024 scholarship fund, we are starting our campaign for 2025 and will be accepting donations toward that goal.    Please consider donating so we may continue to fund the Kenmore West Class of 1960 David Hight Scholarship Fund.

Checks to be made out to: 

Kenmore West Class of 1960 (and marked Scholarship)

   and mailed to:

 

Dianne Logan Weinert

135 Fairways Blvd.

Williamsville, New York 14221

The Village of Kenmore is "Buffalo's First Suburb". Following the Civil War, the City of Buffalo's population grew tremendously. With the invention of electric streetcars, people were able to live outside of walking distance from their jobs. By 1888, L.P.A. Eberhardt purchased land just north of the Buffalo border and began to build a home.Churches were erected beginning in 1891 and the first Village store was opened in 1897.

The first school was erected in 1892. The Kenmore Union School was built where the Municipal Building now stands. The school was utilized until 1911 when the Washington School was opened.

In 1889, the Village boasted a horse-drawn omnibus, which ran up and down Delaware Avenue at no charge to passengers. Lots sold for $250.00 and by 1890 nearly 300 people called Kenmore home. There were no sidewalks, streetlights or sewers. Drinking water was scarce and there were only dirt roads.

By 1899, the Village had enough residents to qualify for legal incorporation. 313 persons signed the proposition calling for incorporation. An election was held and the Village was incorporated on September 5, 1899.

The Fire Department was established in 1903 and the Kenmore Police Department was created in 1919.

 

HOW DID THE VILLAGE OF KENMORE GET ITS NAME?

Former Village Historian, Frederick Parkhurst, explained how the Village was named “Kenmore” in his 1925 book, History of Kenmore. The book explains that Louis Eberhardt, known as the Father of Kenmore, opposed naming the Village “Eberhardt”.  He was responsible for buying up farmland and subdividing the property into a suburban development.  The building which is portrayed on the Village logo is of the Eberhardt  Mansion, located at the corner of Delaware Avenue and Kenmore Avenue.  

The following is an excerpt from Mr. Parkhurst’s book:  

It was proposed calling the village "Eberhardt" ; but firmly 
and modestly Mr. Eberhardt said, "No, they might nickname it 
'Dutchtown'." But the real reason was Mr. Eberhardt's aversion
to personal publicity and display. The Erie Railroad was 
building a station at this time in the north-east section of 
Buffalo near Main Street and had chosen the name "Kenmore", 
but Mr. Eberhardt with an ear for euphony, appropriated 
the name for the fast growing community and the name 
"Kensington" was attached to the Erie Station. A sign bearing 
the name "KENMORE" was placed at the intersection of Delaware 
and Kenmore Avenues, where all who ran might read. 

There are several places called Kenmore in the United States, 
notably Kenmore in Fairfax County, Va., the home of Washington’s 
sister, and a village in Ohio. Probably both these 
places, our own village, and other places so named, took their 
name from a small island on the south-west coast of Ireland; 
or from a village in Scotland.



VILLAGE HISTORIAN: Ed Adamczyk

http://www.villageofkenmore.org/