FARMING WITH DYNAMITE: The Forgotten Stone Boom in Schoharie County documents a brief period, from about 1890 through 1905, when the quarry industry likely surpassed farming as the county’s leading economic force.
Thirty-one quarries dotted the limestone belt that stretches from end-to-end along the northern third of this county in NY’s picturesque Leatherstocking Region. Collectively, these quarries supplied millions of tons of cut and finished stone to projects like the Brooklyn Bridge, the expanding NYS Barge Canal System, and hundreds of homes and prominent buildings meant to last for centuries.

FARMING WITH DYNAMITE describes where the quarries were worked in Cobleskill, Esperance, Schoharie, Sharon Springs, and elsewhere. Some were small; others employed hundreds of laborers, including scores of then-recent Italian and Polish immigrants.
FARMING WITH DYNAMITE fills a historical gap and keeps this once-thriving economy from being forgotten.
Rare photos and a chapter on the forgotten “gold mines” in Schoharie County are included, along with a look inside the Howes Cave cement industry of the early 1920s.
GREAT PRICE: Only $12.95 plus tax and shipping if purchased directly from the author using this website. Also available at select Schoharie County bookstores. Great gift for any history buff.

ABOUT UNDERGROUND EMPIRES
Underground Empires author Dana Cudmore grew up in the middle of Schoharie County—New York State’s “Cave Country”—home to an astonishing 200+ caves including world-famous Howe Caverns and Secret Caverns.
This book explores the wonder and drama in the history of the caves and describes the remarkable personal and engineering accomplishments that turned some into popular tourist destinations. It is an intriguing, surprising, sometimes humorous, and very human look back at nearly 200 years of adventure in New York’s most famous caves and the explorers and entrepreneurs whose courage and vision made the caves a part of the lives of millions of visitors from around the world.
Cudmore and friends explored many of the area’s caves themselves, including some of the spectacular ones that are not public and less well-known, such as Ball’s, Schoharie Caverns, Selleck’s, and Knox Cave. Still not rediscovered is Lester Howe’s legendary Garden of Eden Cave, which Howe claimed was “bigger and better” than the famous cave he discovered and opened to the public in 1842. The search continues.
Hand-in-hand with the story of the caves is the story of the stone and cement quarry that was also built on the region’s unique geology, and the history of the feisty, hardscrabble community that grew up around the original Howes Cave entrance and the quarry.
Previously undocumented details taken from years of accumulated research have formed this compelling history, including such exciting recent developments as the sale of Howe Caverns and its rebirth as an adventure destination (Naked Cave Tour, anyone?), the reopening of the Howes Cave quarry, and the creation of a new, first-of-its-kind, museum dedicated to these underground empires.
“Cudmore has written a book not solely about the caves’ history, but about all the history attached to the caves—the multitude of personalities and the cultural and economic tides that have swept across the Leatherstocking Country and its greatest natural wonders. … Underground Empires is a rise, fall, rise, fall, and rise again story filled with colorful characters, high adventure, a little romance even, and some tantalizing mysteries.” — From the foreword by Robert and Johanna Titus
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