In the 1830s, when a feeder branch of the Erie Canal linked up with the Cheumung River, Corning first became connected to the rest of the world. By the 1880s, Corning had become a railroad town with trains going in all directions. Industrial growth in the 1890s led to the rise of businesses and factories, such as Corning Glass Works. Because Corning produced so much glass, it became known as the crystal city and grew into a tourist destination. A town with many accomplishments, Corning was once home to a minor-league baseball team and is the birthplace of Margaret Sanger, a birth control activist who founded the American Birth Control League, which became Planned Parenthood. From the 1890s until the 1960s, the growth of the community's businesses, parks, churches, and recreation were captured in postcards, many never published before.
- Coming to America
- NY Times Fiction Best Seller List: 2015
- Local Authors and Illustrators
- Season's Readings
- Mother Continent
- Feasting Time!
- Planes, Trains, and Automobiles (and Boats!)
- Tour of America
- Dance the Night Away
- California Dreamin'
- Indigenous Peoples' Day
- Monster Mash
- Magical Realism
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- Coming to America
- NY Times Fiction Best Seller List: 2015
- Local Authors and Illustrators
- Season's Readings
- Mother Continent
- Planes, Trains, and Automobiles (and Boats!)
- Tour of America
- Dance the Night Away
- California Dreamin'
- Indigenous Peoples' Day
- Monster Mash
- Magical Realism
- Bans Off Our Books
- See all