Edward A. Labounty
Born: 1874, son of Alexcis LaBounty Jr and Mary Scafe (1850-1882)
Died: November 1, 1951
Married: Jeanne Mary Jane Snye or Sny on April 15, 1895
Children: Ruth Labounty
Edward J. LaBounty ran a livery stable at 25-27 Woodruff Street/112 Main Street (the addresses are back-to-back). He was known for his wit and his storytelling ability, and for giving impromptu tours of the village. His teams were admirably harnessed and trimmed with tinkling bells. His livery stable was on Woodruff Street, and on quiet evenings, Mrs. LaBounty could be heard calling him to dinner from a considerable distance. 1
In October, 1909, he bought 110 Main Street from Warren Slater where he and his wife ran a boarding cottage until 1925, when he leased it to Aletta Werle and Jane Schneidawind. 2
His livery barn at the corner of Woodruff Street and Church Street Extension was torn down in 1954. 3
One of his early employees was George E. LaBounty.
From a piece by John J. Duquette in the Adirondack Daily Enterprise, August 7, 1987
Ed LaBounty's horse-drawn sleigh would trot by with harness bells jingling and passengers wrapped in colorful Hudson Bay blankets. Ed had his own brand of humor and loved to tell jokes. He always kept a flock of chickens in the barn and one of his favorite stories had to do with an attempt at economy by mixing sawdust with the chicken feed. "Them darn hens would lay nothing but knotholes." The recital was followed by a high pitched, toothless cackle which was funnier than the story. Ed was always a soft touch for a free ride in the sleigh as he, too, loved kids.
The Plattsburgh Sentinel, April 26, 1895
Marriages
LABOUNTY - SNY - At the residence of Mr. Thomas Sny, Disco, Aprl. 15, 1895, by Rev. Leon Cochard, of Black Brook, Eddie Labounty, of Harriettstown, and Jennie Sny, of Disco.
Adirondack Daily Enterprise, March 23, 1970
The Year 1951- "That certificate in the Enterprise Window, dated "1836", was presented to Alexis Bourdian, the grandfather of Will and Ed LaBounty, in recognition of services rendered by him. Will says the name Bourdrian was the original family name of the LaBountys.
Source
- Duquette, John J, "Historic booklet offers personal portraits of SL residents", Adirondack Daily Enterprise, December 10, 1994
Footnotes
1. Gallos, Philip L., Cure Cottages of Saranac Lake, Historic Saranac Lake, 1985. ISBN 0-9615159-0-2, p. 91
2. ibid.
3. Adirondack Daily Enterprise, October 11, 1954, p. 6