Monday, April 28, 2025

Albany Ghost Signs | Restoration Obscura | 04.27.2025







Signs of Another Time:
Albany’s Collection of Ghost Signs
For Restoration Obscura

In Albany, New York, you don’t have to dig far to find history — sometimes, you just have to look up.
Look up at the old brickwork downtown, and you’ll start to notice them: faded names, peeling slogans, hand-painted ads for cigars, clothing, and beverages that haven’t existed for decades.

These are ghost signs — relics of the businesses and industries that once powered the city. Painted directly onto the brick with durable, lead-based paints, they were meant to last. And in a way, they have — long after the shops closed and the companies disappeared, the signs remain, clinging to the sides of warehouses, storefronts, and row buildings.

Once you start seeing them, you’ll notice them everywhere, especially in the older cities of New York and New England. And each one pulls you back — not into a single, polished version of history, but into the rough, ordinary pulse of everyday life a century ago.

We explore how to spot these hidden histories — and how cities tell their stories through the things they leave behind — in Episode 1 of the Restoration Obscura Field Guide Podcast:
How to Read the City Like a History Book.”

 Open on Spotify

The Restoration Obscura Field Guide Podcast is available now on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, and YouTube Music.

For information on www.restorationobscura.com

© 2025 John Bulmer Photography, John Bulmer Media, and Nor'easter Films
www.bulmerphotography.com
www.johnbulmermedia.com
www.noreasterfilms.com
All Rights Reserved


Maiden Lane Hatch | Restoration Obscura | 04.27.2025


The Maiden Lane Hatch | 04.27.2025
Albany, New York 

At first glance, it just looks like another old hatch set into the cobblestones. Heavy iron framing, a rough rectangle of stones, blending into the worn surface of the Maiden Lane cobble stones.
But Maiden Lane isn’t just any alley.

It’s one of Albany’s oldest streets — the historic link between the Hudson River docks and the heart of the city.

In the 1800s, it buzzed with merchants, dockworkers, and shopkeepers, moving goods up from the waterfront into the city’s booming marketplaces.

Originally, this hatch led to the underbelly of that life. Coal for heating. Dry goods for storefronts. Supplies hauled straight off the riverboats.

But by the time Prohibition hit in the 1920s, the purpose of these hatches started to shift.
Basements once used for storage became hiding spots.

Vaults meant for goods started holding contraband.

And the sidewalk hatches — almost invisible to the casual eye — became perfect drop points for something a little more valuable than coal.

Barrels of bootleg whiskey. Crates of Canadian rum. Cases of illegal beer.

Albany’s location made it a natural stop on smuggling routes between New York City, Canada, and points west — and the network of basements, tunnels, and vaults around Maiden Lane helped keep the flow moving.

Today, the hatch on Maiden Lane looks like just another piece of old infrastructure.
But it’s part of a hidden story — one where cities adapted and survived by turning their very bones into lifelines for an underground economy. Most of the remaining hatches have been purposed for utilities access.

If you know how to read the city, you start seeing these clues everywhere.

We explore how to spot these hidden histories — and how cities tell their stories through the things they leave behind — in Episode 1 of the Restoration Obscura Field Guide Podcast:
How to Read the City Like a History Book.”

 Open on Spotify

The Restoration Obscura Field Guide Podcast is available now on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, and YouTube Music.

For information on www.restorationobscura.com

© 2025 John Bulmer Photography, John Bulmer Media, and Nor'easter Films
www.bulmerphotography.com
www.johnbulmermedia.com
www.noreasterfilms.com
All Rights Reserved

Monday, April 21, 2025

New York State Police EOD | 04.19.2025

 


04.19.2025 | New York State Police EOD investigating a suspicious package following April 19th's Hands Off Protest in Albany, New York 

© 2025 John Bulmer Photography, John Bulmer Media, and Nor'easter Films
www.bulmerphotography.com
www.johnbulmermedia.com
www.noreasterfilms.com
All Rights Reserved