Not since 1960 has Cooperstown been without Coleman Answering Service.
The company was started by Dolores Coleman in 1961, when she ran the business from her home in Cooperstown at 79 Beaver St. But after 50 years of ringing phones, morning, noon and night, Coleman has finally hung up.
For 50 years, Coleman answered the call for most events in and around the village of Cooperstown. Whether it was a late-night call during calving season or the unpleasant call about the death of a loved one, her service was there, with Coleman ready to answer.
Born and raised in Cooperstown, Coleman graduated high school and went to work for the telephone company. In 1948, she married Charles Coleman and had three sons, Charles, and later, twins Clifford and Carter.
"One year a good friend, Tom Goodyear, and customer of the phone company invited all us telephone girls to a party at Cary Mede Farm, and asked me what I wanted to do with the rest of my life," Coleman said.
Her reply was much like any young person's would be _ she really did not know.
"How about running an answering service here in Cooperstown?" Goodyear asked.
Coleman's response was no.
"I just didn't think we would have that many customers," Coleman said.
According to Coleman, Goodyear said with his help they would. So July 3, 1961, a switchboard was placed in Coleman's home, and the Coleman Answering Service was in business.
"We started with seven customers that year," Coleman said. "And by the end of the year we were up to 14."
She ran that switchboard day and night for 20 years, but Sept. 25, 1981, they switched to, as Coleman put it, "an oversized telephone."
Over the course of those 50 years, Coleman's customers reached more than 100, and at one point she handled 37 customers at one time, Coleman said. There were the local funeral homes in town, many physicians, veterinarians, Kirns Auto Body, The Automobile Association, The Red Cross and the police department, just to name a few.
Laura Coleman, who is Dolores' daughter-in-law, said, "The phone was always ringing."
So how did the family feel about the non-stop ringing of the phone?
"Well my kids loved it and hated it, I think," Dolores said. "It gave me a chance to always be home for them and, of course, I was just a phone call away."
When asked if she hates the sound of a ringing phone, she laughed and said, "I actually miss it sometimes."
After her 50 years, four months and four days in service, Dolores recently sold her answering service to a company in Albany. Dolores' daughter-in-law said: "She was very concerned that her loyal customers be well-served by the new company, as many became good friends and were no longer just customers."
Dolores and her husband recently sold their home on Beaver Street and moved to the Cooper Lane Apartments in Cooperstown, where they will start enjoying their retirement.
Laura said, "She looks forward to walking to town, having lunches with old friends, shopping, and all the other pleasures she was not able to do since she was always answering the phones."
Dolores no longer has the switchboard that she started with in 1961, nor did she keep the "oversized telephone," but she does keep an array of antique phones that she displays in her apartment.
Dolores' family will be throwing her a retirement party Saturday with family and past customers to honor her dedication to her trade. Dolores and Charles' 63rd wedding anniversary will also be celebrated.
Local News
Area woman hangs up after 50-year career as answering service.
- Local News
-
-
Judge upholds Dryden gas drilling ban
COOPERSTOWN - Advocates for home rule in setting energy policy won the first round of a major battle with the natural gas industry Tuesday when state Supreme Court Judge Phillip Rumsey upheld the town of Dryden's law that zones out drilling operations.
-
Oneonta council OKs hiring of 5 officers
ONEONTA _ The Common Council on Tuesday approved the hiring of five police officers, but not without dissent.
-
Woman held at knifepoint
COBLESKILL -- Village police, after a tense standoff, rescued a woman who was being held at knifepoint Sunday night by a 23-year-old local man, authorities said Tuesday.
-
Proposed gas pipeline could run through Schoharie, Delaware
COOPERSTOWN -- Cabot Oil & Gas Corp., one of the companies involved in hydrofracking operations in Pennsylvania, announced Tuesday that it is teaming up with a second company to run a large-diameter natural gas pipeline to Schoharie County from Susquehanna County, Pa.
-
Crime briefs
A Springfield man was sentenced Feb. 15 in Otsego County Court, following a guilty plea last month on a burglary case, court officials said.
-
'Land Ethic' documentary to be screened Friday
A free screening open to the public of the documentary film "Green Fire: Aldo Leopold and a Land Ethic for Our Time" will be at 7 p.m. Friday in the Instructional Resource Center on West Dormitory Road at SUNY Oneonta.
-
Owner: Softball camp will open again this summer
COOPERSTOWN -- The owner of the Diamond Dreams of Cooperstown softball camp, which has been enmeshed in court battle initiated by its neighbors, said Tuesday he is confident the business will open again this summer despite a recent legal setback.
-
Teen receives Eagle Scout rank with ramp project
Nathan Curtin of Sidney Center is certain he would not have attained the rank of Eagle Scout with BSA Troop 99 of Sidney if it had not been for his parents _ and the parents of fellow scouts.
-
Water quality meeting set
The Otsego County Water Quality Coordinating Committee meeting scheduled for Thursday will feature presentations by area businesses with expertise in water quality improvement and protection projects, a media release announced Thursday.
- Tuesday, February 21, 2012
-
Schumer: Flood relief held up
SCHOHARIE -- The federal spigot for disaster aid that could spark sorely needed business growth has become gummed up by congressional inaction, Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-NY, said Monday.
-
Local artist to show Gettysburg images in exhibit
A local artist will share images of Gettysburg in an exhibition at the Fenimore Art Museum in Cooperstown starting this spring.
-
Court: Town exceeded authority in granting permit to baseball camp
COOPERSTOWN -- A youth baseball camp has been caught off base -- with a state appellate court ruling that officials in a Herkimer County town exceeded their authority when they issued it a building permit.
-
Fly Creek man sues over road abandonment
COOPERSTOWN -- A Fly Creek resident who has obtained a building permit for his property off Honey Joe Road in the town of Otsego has initiated a lawsuit against the municipality after local officials declared the street abandoned.
- Monday, February 20, 2012
-
Polar Bear Jump leaps to record donations this year
There may have been fewer people than in the past few years taking the ultimate plunge into icy-cold water Saturday during the Goodyear Polar Bear Jump, but more money was raised than ever.
-
Teen honored for giving students reality check on tobacco
Samantha Johnson at 17 already has award-winning experience fighting for a cause: Just say no to tobacco and smoking.
-
Supermarkets to again support annual food drive
Two supermarkets again will support the annual 6th Ward Athletic Club Ani P. Colone Food Drive, which starts Wednesday, organizers said.
-
News Briefs
Internship fair to be Wednesday A new internship coordinator at the State University College at Oneonta in collaboration with Hartwick College will present a "Summer Opportunities Fair" from 1 to 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Hunt Union Ballroom at SUNY Oneonta.
-
Winning regional O.M. teams advance to state competition
Students from across the region met in Sidney Center on Saturday to compete in the Region 13 Odyssey of the Mind tournament.
- Saturday, February 18, 2012
-
Area drivers face rising gas prices
Gasoline prices are on the rise again, making motorists dig deeper into their pockets to pay the total on the pump.
-
On the Bright Side: Cornell helps area school's project come to fruition
Students at Roxbury Central School are on their way to becoming self-sufficient locavores, at least when they're at school.
-
Judge upholds Dryden gas drilling ban





