Suffrage in Seneca Falls.

Suffrage (noun) – The right to vote in electing public officials and adopting, or rejecting, proposed legislation. (from Britannica). 

For the past seven years, my wife has taken me on some amazing road trips for my birthday. From a tour of filming locations from one of my favorite TV shows, to ripping my car around a Formula One racetrack, to visiting a pantheon of baseball history, our birthday adventures have taken us to some amazing locations. This year I sought to return the favor and planned out a road trip adventure for her birthday, incorporating cool history, beautiful views, and amazing food.

Our destination? Seneca Falls in the Finger Lakes region of New York. The town is best known as the birthplace of the suffrage movement, when a meeting in 1848 began the slow process toward women securing the right to vote in America. Besides history, Seneca Falls also shares a connection with a beloved holiday movie, offers views of wildlife, and boasts some of the best restaurants in the region.

So come along, then, on my wife’s very own birthday road trip adventure!

Let’s begin:

The Birthday Road Trip

Map of Northeastern United States, with red pin in location of Seneca Falls.
Rather than driving to the Adirondacks, we’d be pointing the car a little to the west, and heading to the northern edge of the Finger Lakes region.
Welcome to Pennsylvania sign along side of two-lane road.
After loading up my Acura TLX with our luggage, we departed on a Friday morning under sunny skies. Less than an hour after leaving our house, we crossed the state line into Pennsylvania.
Welcome to New York sign along side of highway.
Our drive took us northward through the Pocono Mountains, and then through the city of Scranton, before crossing into New York State.
Large brick building with cars parked in street in front of it.
We made a lunch stop in the city of Binghamton, New York, where an old cigar factory is now home to the Lost Dog Cafe & Lounge.
Interior of Lost Dog Cafe.
The Lost Dog was opened in 1994 by members of an all-women’s rock band based in New York City. The cafe is named after a chihuahua owned by one of the founders. The dog would frequently wander away for weeks at a time before invariably showing back up at their home.
Cocktail in glass.
Every birthday girl needs a birthday cocktail! Hello, Grow a Pear (apple brandy, pear nectar, fresh lemon, simple syrup, and aquafaba)! And if you’re at Lost Dog in autumn, give it a try!
Turkey reuben on gluten free toast beside a salad, all on a white plate.
My wife ordered the “Rachael,” a reuben sandwich made with turkey, served on gluten-free bread.
Spring roll bowl with chicken.
Meanwhile, I went with the Spring Roll Bowl – shredded romaine, cabbage, carrots, scallion, cilantro, peppers, peanuts, rice vermicelli, topped with blackened chicken. It was abosolutely delicious… if quite a bit spicy! Fueled up, we made one more stop in Binghamton before continuing on our journey.
Exterior of Old Barn Market.
A block away from the restaurant we found the Old Barn Market and Gluten-Free Bakery. A coffee shop and bakery, Old Barn offers a number of vegan and gluten-free baked goods (more on what we bought later). We stocked up on some road trip snacks and got back in the car.
2020 Acura TLX in parking lot of Emerson Park.
Needing to stretch our legs, we pulled into Emerson Park in Auburn, New York, on the shore of Owasco Lake. Of course, I managed to snag a glamour shot of the TLX.
Panorama of Owasco Lake.
Eleven miles long and over one mile wide, Owasco Lake is the sixth-largest of the Finger Lakes.
Exterior of Gould Hotel in Seneca Falls. Cars are parked in the street in front of the three-story brick building.
A little while later, we arrived at our lodging for the weekend: The Gould Hotel. Built in 1920, the Gould has been in operation for over a century.
Interior of Gould Hotel Restaurant.
The Gould features a highly-rated restaurant, and so it was here where we would enjoy my wife’s birthday dinner.
Shrimp and crab cakes on blue plate.
We started off with an order of gluten-free shrimp and crab cakes on the recommendation of the hotel concierge. My only complaint? If I knew how good they were going to be, I would have ordered double!
Shrimp and wild rice on plate.
My wife ordered this divine shrimp platter, which was absolutely fantastic.
Stuffed haddock with risotto and broccolini.
Meanwhile, I positively inhaled my entree: haddock stuffed with crab meat, served with broccolini and risotto! So good!
Donut with bite taken out of it.
We skipped dessert at the restaurant in favor of some of the treats we bought at the Old Barn Market in Binghamton. Someone who shall not be named maybe got a little impatient waiting for her dessert…
Exterior of Cafe XIX.
The next morning, we started our day with a trip to Cafe 19, a small restaurant that offers breakfast and lunch six days a week (they are closed on Sundays).
Coffee bags with
Cafe 19 is a play on the 19th Amendment, which enshrined women’s right to vote. The cafe leans into the town’s history – I personally loved the names of the coffees, each featuring a different figure from the suffrage movement.
Iced coffee (left) and hot coffee in white cup (right).
There are no major coffee shop chains in Seneca Falls, but with Cafe 19, you don’t need a Starbucks or a Caribou! I had a delicious iced oat milk latte and my wife had a hot almond milk latte.
Eggs, vegetarian sausage, and toast on white plate.
While I enjoyed a yummy sausage and egg sandwich on a bagel, my wife had a quite tasty order of scrambled eggs, vegan sausage, and gluten-free toast. Fueled up, we were ready to explore Seneca Falls!
Statue WHEN STANTON MET ANTHONY along river.
Across the street from the cafe is one of the most iconic statues in Seneca Falls. When Anthony Met Stanton recreates the moment in 1851 when Susan B. Anthony was introduced to Elizabeth Cady Stanton by Amelia Bloomer, all titans in the movement to secure the vote for women.
Women of Change monument with statues of Harriet Tubman, Laura Cornelius Kellogg, Sojourner Truth, and Martha Coffin Wright.
The suffrage movement drew inspiration and support from the movement to abolish slavery in the 19th century. Four women who were major participants in abolition are featured here, including Harriet Tubman, who called nearby Auburn, New York her home.
View of Trinity Church and Seneca River.
From the statues, we also had a lovely view of the Seneca River and Trinity Church (left), which is the most-photographed church in New York.
Peter Whitmer Log Cabin surrounded by trees.
It was still early, so we decided to drive out to nearby Fayette, as my Mom told me that I had family who lived in the town in the mid-19th century. We made a quick stop to Whitmer Farm, which is notable for being the birthplace of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (also known as the Mormon church). Peter Whitmer owned a farm in Fayette, and he was one of six people who helped to establish the church in a log cabin on his farm in 1830. The current building is a reproduction that was built in 1890. The property is now a museum and visitor center run by the Mormon church (via Church of Jesus Christ).
Memorial Day Museum.
My wife then spotted a cool location in nearby Waterloo… the Memorial Day Museum! In 1966, Congress recognized Waterloo as the birthplace of Memorial Day, established in 1865 by a local pharmacist. Many towns claims to be the birthplace of Memorial Day, but Waterloo is its official home (via Waterloo, NY).
Exterior of McClintock home, with National Park Service sign in front yard.
While in Waterloo, our tour of the Women’s Rights National Historic Park began. Rather than one large piece of property, the park is spread across multiple buildings in several towns. This house in Waterloo was home to Mary Ann and Thomas M’Clintock, a Quaker couple who first fought to abolish slavery, and then turned their attention to equal rights for women. In this house the conference organizers would draft the Declaration of Sentiments, a text that enumerated the social, legal, and religious rights of women.
2020 Acura TLX parked in front of Hunt House.
A little further down the road we came to the Hunt House. Jane Hunt was one of the wealthiest women in the area, and she opened her home to the women who would organize the 1848 conference.
Exterior of Wesleyan Chapel.
We then returned into downtown Seneca Falls, to explore the heart of the Women’s Rights National Historic Park: Wesleyan Chapel. In this small church, over two days in 1848, a convention was held that inaugurated the movement to grant women the right to vote.
Pulpit in front of wall mural with information regarding Women's Rights Convention.
We began our tour in the Visitors Center, where a small but well-curated museum tells the history of the suffrage movement. The convention was held on July 19th and 20th of 1848, and was the culmination of the efforts of local women Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Mary Ann M’Clintock, Martha Coffin Wright, and Jane Hunt, who managed to organize the convention in a little over a week!
Exhibit on the campaign in favor and against providing the right to vote to women.
The museum does an excellent job of using primary documents from the era of the suffrage movement to tell the story. The photographs, newspaper articles, and transcripts of speeches provide the viewer with great information.
Display of a corset and a bloomer suit.
Of all the displays, the two competing women’s fashion trends of the mid-19th century is what I found most fascinating. On the left: the corset. Designed to present an idealized form of women’s beauty, the corset forced a woman’s body into a shape that gave an hourglass figure, with a small waist and rounded hips. Extended time wearing corsets could leave the wearer with permanent damage to her internal organs. The counter-trend? The bloomer suit (right), favored by middle-class women who sought comfort and modesty. The bloomer suit was the de facto uniform of the suffrage movement.
Interior of Wesleyan Chapel.
After touring the museum, we went into the Wesleyan Chapel for a talk given by one of the park rangers. We learned a lot about not only the beginning of the movement (for instance, I did not know that civil rights pioneer Frederick Douglass was intimately involved in the 1848 convention), but also about the building itself. Built in 1843, the chapel was sold about 30 years later. It served in a succession of other roles: laundromat, mechanic’s garage, opera house, and roller skating rink… before the National Park Service purchased the building in 1985 and renovated it to look as close to how it appeared in 1848 as possible (via National Park Service).
Exterior of Elizabeth Cady Stanton House, a white, two-story house.
Our final stop for the Women’s Rights National Historic Park was to the home of Elizabeth Cady Stanton. One of the primary organizers of the 1848 convention, Stanton lived in this home from 1847 until 1862, when she, her husband, and their children moved to New York City (via National Park Service).
Exterior of National Women's Hall of Fame.
Seneca Falls came to prominence as a mill town along a water pathway that connected to the Erie Canal. Although its manufacturing history is in the past, some of the old factories remain, repurposed for new uses. The Seneca Knitting Mill, which operated from 1844 – 1999, is now home to the National Women’s Hall of Fame (via Women of the Hall).
Tacos, refried beans, and tortillas on white plate.
All that learning makes a guy hungry! We headed up the street to El Bajio, a Mexican restaurant with good reviews. My wife ordered shrimp tacos, with rice and refried beans.
Taco salad on white plate.
Meanwhile, I had a taco salad, which was equally tasty! Refreshed and refueled, we set out to explore another aspect of Seneca Falls’ history.
Exterior of the Its a Wonderful Life Museum.
In 1945, film director Frank Capra visited Seneca Falls. A year later, the holiday classic It’s a Wonderful Life was released. Locals immediately noticed several seeming correlations between the film’s fictional town of Bedford Falls and their hometown. In 2010, the It’s a Wonderful Life Museum opened to celebrate the possible connection between the film and the town.
Exhibits in the It's a Wonderful Life Museum.
I’ll level with you, readers: while A Christmas Story is my favorite holiday film, It’s a Wonderful Life is a very close second. I remember falling in love with the film when I watched it with my grandparents when I was a young kid. I totally geeked out in the museum!
Exhibits from It's a Wonderful Life.
The exhibits were fantastic, and filled with lots of information I did not know. For instance, the newborn baby in the film was portrayed by identical twins. Years later, Don Collins, one of the twins, wrote to Hollywood icon Jimmy Stewart, introducing himself and his brother, and sharing their connection through the film. Stewart wrote a warm response and shared how he and his wife were the proud parents of twins as well. Both letters are on display in the museum.
Drawing of GEORGE LASSOS THE MOON from the film, along with a piano and a Santa Mask.
The museum felt a little cramped and disorganized, but I read later that the current location is temporary while the permanent museum undergoes a major renovation. Of course, the small space did nothing to take away from my enjoyment… as well as the case that the museum is free to visit (although a $5 donation is requested).
Two pairs of silver earrings in jewelry boxes on display.
There are only five props known to still exist from the film – three of the cars from the film, which are all in private hands, and these two pairs of earrings that were worn by Gloria Grahame. Grahame played Violet, the woman who George Bailey helps out financially.
Bridge Street Bridge, with light pole that has street sign for Angel Avenue.
After leaving the museum, we walked to a location in town with a major connection to the film: the Bridge Street Bridge. This bridge bears a striking resemblance to the one in the film where George Bailey contemplates ending his own life before meeting his guardian angel Clarence. As you may remember, George dove into the river to save Clarence from drowning. Perhaps Capra was inspired by the story of Antonio Varacalli, an Italian immigrant who in 1917 jumped into the Seneca River to rescue a woman from drowning, although his heroism led to his own death.
Bells affixed to side of bridge railing.
“Every time a bell rings, an angel gets his wings.” In a lovely nod to the film, numerous bells adorned the side of the bridge.
Exterior of Local FLX.
Before heading to our next destination, we made a quick stop at Local FLX (FLX = Finger Lakes). It is a store that sells products from artisans in the Finger Lakes region. We had a lovely chat with the owner, who gave us several recommendations for dinner. The merchandise was excellent – unique, high quality, and affordable. It’s definitely worth a stop!
Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge Visitor Center.
Our last major stop of the day was a few miles east of Seneca Falls, to Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge. The Refuge was established in 1937 to oversee a stretch of marshy land between the Cayuga and Seneca Rivers. It is a major stopping point for migratory birds.
Entrance to Wildlife Drive.
After a helpful chat with Bob, a volunteer in the Visitor Center who was a wealth of information about birds currently in the marshes, we set off on Wildlife Drive. The road offers a three mile route through the refuge.
Collection of sandhill cranes.
A large group of sandhill cranes were foraging for food in the grass. Sandhill cranes are omnivores, eating berries, grains, amphibians, and small mammals. Once only spotted during migration, warmer recent winters have resulted in groups of these birds living in the refuge year round.
Sandhill crane in pond, with smaller birds in background.
This sandhill crane was wading in the Main Pool, a large body of water in the middle of the refuge. The pool was filled with hundreds of birds of all types.
Row of trees.
“Hey, what’s that black thing in the trees?” my wife, with her superpower eyesight, asked. “Umm… maybe an empty nest?” I responded. “Take a look with your camera,” came her reply…
Two eagles in tree.
An empty nest… or maybe two pair-bonded bald eagles!
Eagle in flight.
As if on command, one of the bald eagles left the tree and flew right toward us.
Bald eagle in flight.
This moment alone was worth the trip to Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge.
Birds taking flight from main pool.
Bob, the helpful volunteer we spoke to in the visitor center, told us that if we see the birds on the Main Pool start to become excited and fly away, it means they see the shadow of an eagle overhead. Just like he said, as soon as the eagle flew out over the pool, the birds on the pool started going berserk.
Gull in flight.
This gull made for a willing subject as it hovered over the marshland.
Statue of eagle set on stone plinth.
Visible from I-90, which is adjacent to the Refuge, this eagle statue is strikingly lifelike. Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge is a fun destination near Seneca Falls, and it gets two thumbs up from The Open Road Ahead. Best of all, admission is free!
Downtown Seneca Falls, lit up at dusk.
After returning to Seneca Falls, we decided to enjoy the mild temperatures. We left the Acura at the hotel and walked to dinner in downtown Seneca Falls.
Interior of Fall Street Brewery with tables and bar visible.
Our first stop was for appetizers at Fall Street Brewery.
Hummus and tortilla chips on platter.
Fall Street Brewery was… ok. Despite three workers talking to each other when we arrived, no one rushed to greet us or orient us to the restaurant. My wife’s question about gluten-free ciders was met with befuddlement (and no offer to help her find an alternative beverage). We tried a hummus platter, which was tasty enough, and I enjoyed the Mexican lager, which reminded me of a cross between Tecate and Corona. However, the lack of good service really took away from the experience.
Exterior of Red Brick Pub Kitchen and Cocktails.
We made up for it at our next stop… Red Brick Pub Kitchen and Cocktails. Recommended by our new friend at Local FLX, it was a neighborhood bar in the best sense of the word.
Cheeseburger and tater tots.
Dinner hit all the right notes – a gluten-free Rootstock hard cider for my wife and a glass of Jameson Black Barrel for me. We both got burgers (which were delicious), but the high point were the tater tots – some of the best I’ve ever eaten. Service was friendly and quick, and the food was excellent. It was evident that the patrons were all locals – we were the only outsiders there, but the company was friendly. Definitely give it a try if you’re in town!
View of US-20 with rising sun and fog over roadway.
The next morning, we were on the road early for our drive back to New Jersey. A rising sun and an early morning fog made for a dramatic view along US-20.
Exterior of At Long Last restaurant.
Our final meal in the area was breakfast at At Long Last, a cafe in Auburn, NY.
Interior of At Long Last cafe, with view toward bar and dining area.
The interior decor was interesting. It looked like a place that belonged down the Jersey shore in Long Branch or Sea Isle City, and not in northern New York.
Toast, eggs, and corned beef hash.
My wife had eggs with mushroom, spinach, and tomato, with a side of home fries and gluten-free toast (she loved it). Equally as good was my order of corned beef hash, served with scrambled eggs (hey, I know corned beef should be served with poached eggs, but I like what I like!), and marble rye. The food was excellent, our server Davonte was friendly and attentive, and our meal prepared us for our long drive home.
Welcome to New Jersey sign over I-87.
By mid-afternoon, we had arrived back in New Jersey. The state has been in the midst of a severe drought, and the dry conditions have led to numerous wildfires. A thick layer of smoke hung in the air over the highway, and despite my car’s ventilation system being set to recirculate, the smell of smoke filled the cabin. Mercifully, about fifteen minutes later we were through the worst of it.
Car odometer reading 49902 miles.
We pulled into the garage, the TLX nearing the 50,000 mile mark. The car transported us with comfort, ease, and sportiness to upstate New York and back. The Acura continues to impress. Onward!

Wrapping Up, and a Personal Note

Text of newspaper clipping about the attendance of Dr. M. Virginia Glauner of Syracuse who attended the 1848 Seneca Falls conference.
Since her retirement, my Mom has made our family’s ancestry her personal research project. When we returned from Seneca Falls, she shared a really cool story with me – my great-great-great grandmother was in attendance at the 1848 convention! Mom emailed me this clipping from the Utica Saturday Globe, where Dr. M. Virginia Glauner had spoken at a conference in Washington DC in 1898 on the 50th anniversary of the Seneca Falls convention. After her first husband died, she attended and graduated from medical school at Syracuse University in 1878, wore the bloomer suit, and was “an earnest suffrage advocate.” Very, very, very cool!

Seneca Falls is an amazing place for a long weekend adventure. Come for the important history, but stay for the fun shops, great restaurants, cool museums, and amazing wildlife. Better yet, spend a week in the Finger Lakes, exploring not just Seneca Falls, but the amazing opportunities for adventure you can find in the region!

Thanks for coming along on this special birthday adventure!

‘Til next time.

6 thoughts on “Suffrage in Seneca Falls.

  1. Wow, what an incredible birthday trip! The food all sounded delicious (minus the appetizer spot that was disappointing). I loved reading about the history of the women’s rights movement and Seneca Falls with the connection to It’s a Wonderful Life. How cool that you got to see a couple of bald eagles! And that is really neat to find out that your family had a connection to the 1848 convention!

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  2. Happy birthday to your wife! That’s a great trip you planned for her. Glad you had a good time.

    Trimity Church is gorgeous ! Love the architecture and setting next to the river.

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  3. What an interesting weekend!! Looks like a great birthday trip for your wife- gold star ⭐️! The eagles were awesome 🦅 Mikey and Mae loved the eagle picture- especially because you could see its face! Hugs from all of us ❤️

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