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Exploring Israeli’s Origins: What Would We Know without the Biblical Text?

Date: May 10, 2011 - June 21, 2011

[except June 7]
Time: 7:30-8:30 PM
Location: JCC, Amsterdam and 76th Street, New York

What would we know about ancient Israel if we had only the archaeological record; if we could only study ancient Israel as we study the other countries and peoples of the ancient Near East? And then consider how we can integrate into a single narrative the information we do have from the Bible with the information from archaeology related to the origin of Israel. Topics will include: The God of Israel; Four Hundred Years in Egypt; Peoples in the Wilderness and The Historical Context of Israel’s Origin

To register go to: http://www.jccmanhattan.org
$75.00 Member
$90.00 Nonmember
JLSARC00S1

War and Peace: Israel and Palestine in Ancient Times

Date: May 1, 2011

Time: 2:00
Location: Scarsdale Library, 54 Olmsted Road, Scarsdale
Cost: free
Sponsored by the Archaeological Institute of America, Westchester Society

Egypt, Libya, Syria, Arabia, Yemen.  These lands have been occupied for millennia and interacted with Israel in ancient times.  The past is part of the political debate in the present not just for the Crusades but for thousands of years earlier when Israel and the Arabs first emerged in the archaeological record.  References to those times are part of the debate today as Israeli archaeologists excavate with Bible in one hand and spade in the other and Palestinians make the following assertions:

“Our forefathers, the Canaanites and Jebusites, built the cities and planted the land; they built the monumental city of Bir Salim [Jerusalem]…”
Yasser Arafat, Land Day speech, March 30, 2000, in Al-Quds

“I am a Palestinian.  I am a descendant of the Jebusites, the ones who came before King David.  This [Jerusalem] was one of the most important Jebusite cities in the area…. Yes, it’s true.  We are the descendants of Jebusites,”
Faisal Husseini, an advisor to Arafat and minister for Jerusalem affairs, interview New York Times Magazine, October 3, 1999

What do we know of these terms “Jebusite,” “Canaanite,” and “Palestinian” of the speakers who are “Arab” and of the audience in “Israel”?   Let us examine what light archaeology can shed on these terms in ancient times so we can understand the use and misuse of them in the present.

Women of the Bible

Date: February 28, 2012

TIME: 7:00 PM – 8:30 PM  [4 times on Tuesday]
LOCATION: JCC 334 Amsterdam Avenue, New York
COST: $60.00 / Member
$75.00 / Nonmember

Some Biblical women are never identified by name ? Potiphar’s wife, the Benjaminite concubine, Jephthah’s daughter ? while others have given their names to countless women, Jewish and non-Jewish. Who were these women whose names still resonate? What did their stories mean millennia ago and what do they mean today? Join Peter Feinman, president of the Institute of History, Archaeology, and Education to unravel the mysteries of these Biblical women.

For more information, or to register, please call:
646-505-5708
Or register Online Here

War and Peace: Israel and Palestine in Ancient Times and Today

Date: March 5, 2012

DATE: 3 sessions- starting March 5 ending March 19
TIME: 1:00 PM – 3:00 PM
LOCATION: Scarsdale Public Library, Scarsdale Adult School
TUITION: $90.00

The past is never dead. It isn’t even past. Nowhere is this truer than in the Middle East. Every footstep, every shovel, every location is part of a millennial old story being played out in deadly seriousness by the Israelis and Palestinians today. In a world where everyone has the right to their own opinions and to their own facts, how can we ever know what happened? How can archaeology be used and abused as an instrument of knowledge and as a weapon of war for an area that is always in the headlines? We will explore what we know and what we don’t know about Israel and Palestine in ancient times and today.

Register Online Here

Immigration in American History

Date: June 18, 2012

TIME: 7:00 PM
LOCATION: Dobbs Ferry Public Library, 55 Main Street, Dobbs Ferry, NY

Immigration is as American as apple pie. For as long as there has been an America, there have been immigrants. In some ways each group of immigrants has a unique story to tell; in some ways they all share a common story. The future of the immigrants today to this country reminds us of the need to understand the immigrants of the past

When Germans were Hispanics

When Catholics were Moslems

When Bohemians became Middle Americans

When Republicans admired Lincoln

In this talk, we will begin the journey of understanding the history of immigration in America.

For additional information contact:

Sara Rodgers
Head of Reference
Dobbs Ferry Public Library
55 Main Street
Dobbs Ferry, NY 10522
srodgers@wlsmail.org
www.dobbsferrylibrary.org
(914) 231-3057

The Mohawk Valley Teacherhostel™

Date: July 18, 2011 - July 22, 2011
An Interdisciplinary Experience
Dates: July 18-22, 2011
Location: Mohawk Valley
Times: 9:00 start to 5:00 to 7:30 PM depending on the day
Contact Hours: 45
Fee: $275 (includes 5 lunches and 4 dinners)
Cutoff Date: June 6, 2011
Lodging: Amsterdam Super8 for $67.99/night for a double
Click here for registrationIn an effort to bring the riches of the Mohawk Valley experience to the classroom, this five day intensive program will bring to life many aspects that make the Mohawk Valley truly unique. Discover the stories of the Iroquois, the Palatine Germans, the Dutch, the Erie Canal, the Valley’s Revolutionary history and ties to the Civil War and Industrial Revolution. Explore how these topics of local history and heritage can be related to the American history story as a whole, along with the New York State Social Studies Standards for Learning. After these five days in the Mohawk Valley, you will feel that you have had a little taste of everything the Valley has to offer.Day 1 – Monday, July 18
9:00 Schenectady County Historical Society
32 Washington Ave, Schenectady
www.schist.org
Located in the heart of Schenectady’s Historic Stockade area, this spot is an excellent place to begin our journey in the Mohawk Valley. Schenectady, the “city that lights and hauls the world,” was a center in the industrial and transportation revolutions. Dating back to the 17th century, the settlement began as a Dutch trading center. Frank Taormina, a retired high school teacher and docent with the historical society, will lay it all out for you explaining how Schenectady was the “Gateway to the West.” Next a Mohawk-Mohican David Cornelius, Native American and Colonial History educator and independent scholar, will present “Life for the Oneidas and the Mohawks in Schenectady” as an introduction to the Stockade area.

10:30 Walking Tour of the Stockade Area
Join Maureen Gebert of the Schenectady Heritage Area for a guided tour of the historic Stockade District to learn about the colonial history of the area, the Dutch influence, the architecture, and the development of a heritage area.

12:30 LUNCH
First Reformed Church Assembly Hall, 8 North Church Street, Schenectady
www.1streformed.com
Enjoy an authentic Schenectadian Italian lunch from the Roman Villa in this historic church. The First Reformed Church is the oldest congregation in Schenectady dating back to the time of Schenectady Massacre. While waiting for lunch, take a minute to view the archival history displays about the founding and history of First Reformed Church. Following lunch, two Union College professors (Clifford Brown and Andrew Morris) will join us for discussions about the history of Union College and Schenectady’s Industries: GE and ALCO.

3:00 Bus Tour of Vale Cemetery
Meet at main office 907 State Street, Schenectady
www.valecemetery.org  
Join Scott Haefner, former Town of Rotterdam Historian and currently the site manager at Old Fort Johnson, for a guided tour of Schenectady’s Rural Vale Cemetery which today is located right in the middle of the city. Haefner will use Vale Cemetery as an example for the rural cemetery movement but he will also point out the giants of industry who are buried here.

4:30 Mabee Farm
1080 Main Street, Rotterdam Junction
www.mabeefarm.org
Concurrent sessions will split the group in two: Join Pat Barrot, site manager, for a house tour of the oldest house in the Mohawk Valley located west of Schenectady, circa 1690. Also join David Manthey, historical interpreter, for a visit to the bateaux. Prior to the Erie Canal, the bateaux were used on the Mohawk River for trading and travel.

5:30 DINNER
Mabee Farm’s Dutch Barn
Enjoy a catered picnic dinner by Price Chopper, an area grocer whose headquarters are located in Schenectady but own stores throughout New York and New England. Soon you will be joined by Jack the Mabee Farm’s slave, portrayed by Clifford Oliver Mealy. Mealy, as Jack, will tell you tales about traveling by bateaux during the French and Indian War and what life was like for a New York slave in the mid-18th century.

Day 2 – Tuesday, July 19
9:00 Schoharie Crossing State Historic Site
Meet at the Visitor Center 129 Schoharie Street, Fort Hunter
www.nysparks.com
Schoharie Crossing is the only place in New York State where you can see all three stages of Erie Canal development side by side. Browse through the exhibit “Little Short of Madness” then join education coordinator Tricia Shaw for a discussion about how the history of the Erie Canal can be taught using different disciplines and then finally take a short walking tour to the Schoharie Aqueduct. See the remains of both the Original and the Enlarged Erie Canal, the East Guard Lock and the Schoharie Aqueduct.

10:30 Shrine of Our Lady of Martyrs
Meet at the museum building. 136 Shrine Road, Fultonville
www.martyrshrine.org
This is where the story of the French Jesuit missionaries and the Mohawk Indians collide. In the Mohawk village called Ossernenon, three Jesuit missionaries were martyred during the 1640s. Father Isaac Jogues, René Goupil, a Jesuit brother, and John Lalande, a lay missioner, are the only canonized American martyrs. Also the beatified “Lily of the Mohawks,” Blessed Kateri Tekakwitha, was born here in 1656. This area is beautiful, historical, tragic and spiritually renewing. Join Beth Lynch, museum director, to tour the museum exhibits and a short history walk through the grounds.

Noon LUNCH
Shrine’s Visitor Center
The walking tour will end just in time for lunch. Take in the view of the Mohawk Valley as you enjoy pizza, wings and salads from TJ’s Pizzeria. After lunch, return inside for a power point presentation by Amsterdam City Historian Rob Von Hasslin who will discuss the Dutch Influence on New York State and the local area in particular.

2:00 Old Fort Johnson
Corner of Routes 5 and 67, Fort Johnson
www.oldfortjohnson.org
Sir William Johnson arrived in America as a young man in the 1730’s seeking his uncle’s lands to oversee. But in the process of settling on the frontier, he became one of the most influential individuals of 18th Century New York. As commissioner for Indian Affairs, he had a foot in two worlds. Old Fort Johnson, his home built in 1749, will be your first introduction to this man that you will hear so much about in the next few days. With director Alessa Wylie, learn about Johnson’s rising power during the French and Indian War and how this had an impact on the local area.

4:00 Walter Elwood Museum
300 Guy Park Avenue, Amsterdam
www.walterelwoodmuseum.org
Located along the banks of the Mohawk River and considered to be “Amsterdam’s Attic,” the Walter Elwood Museum acts as the local historical society in many ways. Here you will learn about the industrial revolution in the Mohawk Valley focusing on the “carpet city.” Join director Ann Peconie for tours in the Industry and Victorian galleries.

5:00 Outdoor Reception on the Banks of Mohawk River
Enjoy a delicious catered reception from the Union Hall Restaurant in Johnstown. Because the Walter Elwood Museum is nestled between the railroad tracks and the Mohawk River, there will be a brief talk during the reception by Peter Betz, Fulton County Historian about the relationship between the river’s geography and the railroad’s history.

Day 3 – Wednesday, July 20
9:00 Johnson Hall State Historic Site
Hall Avenue, Johnstown www.nysparks.com
This was Sir William Johnson’s second home, built in 1763. This Georgian house became the nucleus of a working estate designed to encourage settlement and further Johnson’s control of his lands. A mill, blacksmith shop, Indian store, barns, and other necessary buildings were added, as well as housing for servants. In 1774, during a tense conference with 600 Indians at Johnson Hall, Sir William collapsed and died. Upon Sir William’s death, Johnson Hall passed to his son, John. During the American Revolution, John chose to remain loyal to the Crown and fled to Canada. Johnson Hall was confiscated in 1779 by the State of New York as Loyalist property and was subsequently sold at auction. An historical interpreter will provide a tour of the building from the Loyalist point of view. Understand why the conflicts on New York’s frontier during the Revolutionary War were America’s first Civil War.

11:00 Arkell Museum
2 Erie Blvd, Canajoharie
www.arkellmuseum.org
The Arkell Museum is considered one of the best rural art galleries in the country with a wide variety of famous artists in the collection such as Winslow Homer, George Inness, Ralph Blakelock, Childe Hassam, Robert Henri, and Thomas Hart Benton. The Arkell Museum’s collection also includes objects and archives related to the Mohawk Valley. The landscape of the Mohawk Valley and the marketing of Beech-Nut products are subjects explored in museum programs and exhibitions. For the summer 2011 season, the Arkell Museum is celebrating Mohawk Valley landscapes with the works of Rufus Grider on exhibit. The docents at the Arkell will provide explanation about Rufus Grider’s and the Moravians’ importance and how the Mohawk Valley landscape has changed over time.

12:00 LUNCH Gardens of the Arkell Museum
Have lunch catered by Melissa’s in the gardens and surrounded by artwork owned by Bartlett Arkell. You might even have a few minutes to check out the Beech Nut Gallery here in the heart of “Flavor-town.”

1:00 Village of Canajoharie
Meet Historian Rachel Bliven just outside the Arkell Museum for a guided walking tour of downtown Canajoharie to see the many limestone structures. Learn how limestone was an importance building stone in the Mohawk Valley for the Erie Canal, private residences and as an export for other construction projects around the country.

3:00 Fort Plain Museum
389 Canal Street, Fort Plain
www.fortplainmuseum.com
This small local history museum is packed full of hidden gems. Join Board of Trustee members Norm Bollen and Ed Pangburn as they use items from the collection to describe the how the Mohawk Valley (Fort Plain and Canajoharie, in particular) was the crossroads of the Revolutionary War. The story of the women on the American Frontier will also be included.

4:00 Local Historical Documents in the Classroom – Montgomery County Historian Kelly Farquhar will talk about how to use local historical documents in the classroom.

5:00 Dinner – Fort Plain Museum

Day 4 – Thursday, July 21
9:00 Iroquois Museum
324 Caverns Road, Howes Cave
www.iroquoismuseum.org
One of the most unique things about this museum is its architecture. Shaped like and based on the Iroquois longhouses from 400 years ago, the building provokes another world view by incorporating construction techniques, social history, creation legends, and practical purpose. Join Education Curator Mike Tarbell for an interactive program entitled “Stories my Grandmother Told Me”. This program will provide an in-depth introduction to the world of the Iroquois prior to European contact. Tarbell will use everything at his disposal: the exhibits, the building, the outdoors, artifacts, etc.

Noon LUNCH
Howes Caverns Dining Room
255 Discovery Drive, Howes Cave
www.howecaverns.com
Enjoy a sandwich and salad buffet while taking in the sweeping vista before you. As you dine, remember that you are sitting on top of one of the oldest tourist attractions in New York State. The Howe Caverns, run by Lester Howe and discovered by his cows, opened for tours in 1843 at only 50 cents for a lantern lit tour. Beneath you are amazing cave sights such as stalactites and stalagmites, flowstone, grottos and much more. Unfortunately this teacher hostel is not focusing on science, so you will have to make a return visit to go underground. During lunch, director for the Institute of History, Archaeology and Education Peter Feinman will provide an introduction to the story of the Palatine Germans, which will be our focus for Friday.

2:00 Old Stone Fort
145 Fort Road, Schoharie
www.theoldstonefort.org
The Old Stone Fort Museum Complex, operated by the Schoharie County Historical Society, celebrates and preserves the rich, historic legacy of New York’s beautiful Schoharie Valley. Buildings include an early Palatine German-style home (currently under restoration), a 1780s Dutch barn, an 1830s law office, and an 1890s one-room schoolhouse as well as the 1772 stone church that was fortified in 1777 and attacked by 700 Loyalists and Indians under the direction of Sir John Johnson and Mohawk Captain Joseph Brant in 1780. Meet with the director Carle Kopecky and curator Daniel Beams for two experiential programs: Citizen Soldier and Agricultural Industry.

5:00 DINNER
George Mann Tory Tavern
104 Vrooman Cross Road, Schoharie
www.torytavern.com
In 1777, tavern keeper George Mann, grandson of one of the original settlers and a captain in the 15th New York Militia, changed allegiance and his establishment became a meeting place for Tories (people still loyal to England). Ralph and Irmgard Buess purchased the historic building in 1977, investing thirteen years in restoration and renovation. Handmade stenciling, drapes and waitstaff uniforms create a formal Colonial ambiance. An elegant four course dinner will include appetizer, salad, choice of one of four entrees and dessert.

Day 5 – Friday, July 22
9:00 Gems along the Mohawk
800 Mohawk Street, Herkimer
www.gemsalongthemohawk.com
This gem of a gift shop introduces you to what is beyond the Mohawk Valley including Cooperstown’s Baseball Hall of Fame, Chittenango the OZ town and the Adirondack Mountains.

9:30 Erie Canal Cruise
www.ErieCanalCruises.com
Take a 90 minute boat ride on the Erie Canal through Lock 18. This tour is fully narrated with lots of history trivia and tidbits.

11:30 LUNCH
Have lunch along the banks of the Erie Canal at the Waterfront Grill. While you enjoy a sandwich, learn about “The Murder that will Never Die: Yellow Journalism in Herkimer County” with Herkimer County Historian Susan Perkins. This small town murder made national headlines for the yellow journalism practices surrounding its reporting.

1:00 Indian Castle Church
Route 5S, Little Falls
www.indiancastle.com
Just a very brief stop and talk here at the Indian Castle Church with Town of Danube Supervisor Charles Welden will bring the story of the Mohawks and Christianity full circle. This small white church on the hill was built by Sir William Johnson in 1769. The bell tower holds the original bell purchased for the pleasure of the Indians by Sir William Johnson. After the war, the Indians tried to retrieve what they considered to be their bell but the clapper sounded the alarm and the neighborhood responded. The bell still resides in the bell tower.

2:30 Palatine Church
Route 5, Nelliston
Visit this 1770 Palatine German church, gathering site for the Patriots prior to marching into the Battle of Oriskany. Kathryn Weller, director of the Slate Valley Museum, will present her masters thesis entitled “German Churches and Changes in Transportation” for you in this historic church.

4:00 Nellis Tavern
Route 5, St. Johnsville
www.palatinesettlementsociety.org
This 1747 Palatine German tavern is one of the oldest wooden buildings in the Mohawk Valley. This two story structure recalls farming, transportation changes, architectural history, and social history. Join members of the board for answers to your questions in many of the rooms. Against this historic backdrop, we will wrap up the week’s activities with a finger food reception and discussion.

American Revolution Teacherhostel

Date: June 26, 2011 - July 3, 2011

Teaching American History
National Field Study of the Revolutionary Era The Hudson River Region, Saratoga, and Hubbardton Battle Field

The Institute of History, Archaeology, and Education (IHARE) is pleased to announce that the Turning Points in American History: Winning the War, Winning the Peace program created for the South Burlington, Vermont school district as part of a Teaching American History grant is being made available to teachers from outside the district. Teachers will have the option to participate in all or portions of the program and be charged accordingly.

Dates and Locations:
June 26-June 30 Lower Hudson Valley
July 1-3 Saratoga, Hubbardton

Costs:
Sunday 3:00-8:00 $40
Monday 9:00-5:00 $25
Tuesday 9:00-5:00 $25
Wednesday 9:00-5:00 $25
Thursday 9:00-4:30 $50
Monday 9:00-9:00 $60
Tuesday 9:00-9:00 $60
Wednesday 9:00-9:00 $75
Friday/Sunday $95

Reservations have been made in Newburgh, Albany, Clifton Park, and Rutland.

Participants will also have the option of traveling on the bus which will be bringing the teachers from Vermont.

In addition to studying the powerful men and soldiers of the Revolution, we will also pay attention to the rest of society and how everyone had choices to make and dangers to face during this era. We will use the lenses of race, gender, social class, ethnicity, and religion during our field study and will examine varied perspectives on the era with regard to freedom, justice, and equality. We will also consider the challenge of preserving history and discuss whose history should be preserved.

If you wish to participate, please send an email to contact@ihare.org with the days and times you are interested in.

June 26, Sunday
The Thomas Cole House/Cedar Grove
218 Spring Street
Catskill, NY
http://www.thomascole.org/

Painter of “The View from Fort Putnam” which we will visit the next day on the campus of the United States Military Academy.

The Cedar Grove property has an ancient history that began with a 1684 land grant, followed by a land subdivision in 1773. The subdivision lines largely determined Cedar Grove’s configuration. Starting small, the Thomson family developed adjoining lots beginning in 1797. In 1815, they built the Federal- style main house that remains today, and quickly compiled a substantial farm property of about 110 acres. Despite fronting on the Hudson River, the Cedar Grove house and infrastructure were built along a local turnpike road, today’s Spring Street, that crossed through the western portion of the property, where the land sloped away from the river. As such, Cedar Grove has always enjoyed an orientation towards the western prospect of the Catskill Mountains, appropriate as this was the scene of Thomas Cole’s inspiration.

In addition to the house, Cedar Grove included a cluster of outbuildings. Several of these are significant for their use as studios during distinct periods of Thomas Cole’s career. Earliest was a farmhouse, often called the cottage, used until 1839 when a separate store- house/studio was built. In 1846, Cole designed a free standing studio, called the new studio, south of the house. The new studio was demolished in modern times, but there are plans to reconstruct it.

12:00 Arrive by bus from Vermont: Lunch
12:30 House and Studio Tour
1:30 Sketch or Grave Walk
2:00 Leave for New Windsor Cantonment

New Windsor Cantonment State Historic Site
374 Temple Hill Road
New Windsor, NY 12553
http://nysparks.state.ny.us/historic-sites/22/details.aspx
Phone: (845) 561-1765

New Windsor Cantonment State Historic Site is where the Continental Army under General George Washington spent the last winter and spring of the Revolutionary War. In October 1782, General Washington moved his northern army to New Windsor to establish winter quarters. Some 7,500 soldiers and 500 women and children civilian refugees encamped here. By late December 1782, they had erected nearly 600 log huts into a “cantonment,” a military enclave. It was at the New Windsor Cantonment that the cease fire orders were issued by Washington ending the eight-year War of Independence on April 19, 1783.

Knox’s Headquarters State Historic Site
County Rd 74/Forge Hill Rd
Vails Gate, NY
http://nysparks.state.ny.us/historic-sites/5/details.aspx
Phone: (845) 561-5498

On several occasions during the Revolutionary War, Major General Henry Knox, Commander of the America artillery, established his military headquarters at John Ellison’s 1754 Georgian-style house in Vails Gate. From October 1782 until the spring of 1783, as 7,000 soldiers and 500 “camp followers” were establishing winter quarters at the New Windsor Cantonment, and General Washington was lodged at Jonathan Hasbrouck’s house in Newburgh, New York, Major General Horatio Gates occupied the elegant home from which he commanded the cantonment. Here the army awaited the end of the Revolutionary War that became effective when Washington issued the cease fire orders on April 19, 1783.

National Purple Heart Hall of Honor
374 Temple Hill Road
Vails Gate, New York
http://www.thepurpleheart.com/
Phone: (845) 561-1765

The National Purple Heart Hall of Honor commemorates the extraordinary
sacrifices of America’s servicemen and servicewomen who were killed or wounded in combat. The mission of the Hall of Honor is to collect and preserve the stories of Purple Heart recipients from all branches of service and across generations to ensure that all recipients are represented.

3:00 National Purple Heart Museum
4:00 Bus to Knox’s Headquarters
4:15 Knox’s Headquarters
5:15 Bus to New Windsor Cantonment
5:30 New Windsor Cantonment – group presentations including firing drill
6:30 Last Encampment – Donny Van Leuvan
7:00 Leave
7:15 Dinner

Lodging: Super8 Newburgh
1287 Route 300
Newburgh, NY 12550 US
Phone: 1-845-564-5700

June 27, Monday
United States Military Academy
Highland Falls, NY

The History of West Point is integral to the history of the United States of America. From the day of its founding on March 16, 1802, a favorite expression at West Point is that “much of the history we teach was made by people we taught.” Great leaders such as Grant and Lee, Pershing and MacArthur, Eisenhower and Patton, Schwarzkopf and Petraeus are among the more than 50,000 graduates. Countless others, following military service, have had distinguished careers in business, medicine, law, sports, politics, and science. Four current graduates and two former faculty members of the United States Military Academy are members of the 111th Congress.

9:00 Welcome: History Department, Lincoln Hall

9:15 “Did the Americans Really win the Revolutionary War?” Ray Raymond, USMA

No. The Americans won by not losing. What made this possible? First, Washington’s extraordinary leadership, skilled military management which kept the continental army together, his skill as a spymaster and the handling of intelligence, and his strategic genius. Second, the indomitable courage of his soldiers who fought on despite dreadful shortages of food, uniforms, and supplies. Third, the strength of the southern insurgency which the British never understood and were never able to effectively counter.

A former British diplomat, Dr. Ray Raymond is Professor of Political Science
and History at the State University of New York and Adjunct Professor of Comparative Politics and International Relations at the United States Military Academy. He is Chairman of the Marshall Scholarships for the Mid-Atlantic States of New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania and Fairfield County, Connecticut. He is also co-founder and chief executive of the City Fellowships in Financial Services, a scholarship program for young minority financiers funded by Goldman Sachs.

Since 1997, he has advised British Prime Minister Tony Blair’s Chief of Staff and Senior Policy Adviser on US politics and public policy. During his diplomatic career, Dr. Raymond founded or co-founded four scholarship or fellowship programs to strengthen UK-US relations as well as a range of other public diplomacy initiatives to strengthen wider transatlantic relations and build new relationships with American minorities.

Professor Raymond is a specialist in 20th Century and 18th century American history with a special emphasis on UK-US and US-European relations. His scholarly work has been published in “Diplomatic History”,” The International History Review,” “International Affairs” “The World Today” and the “Canadian Review of Studies in Nationalism” amongst other scholarly journals. His study of the Marshall Plan in the British Isles was published by Cambridge University Press. He has also lectured widely on Anglo-American and US-European relations. His most recent work on “UK-US Relations at the Start of the Twenty First Century” was published by the US Army War College Strategic Studies Institute in January 2006 and on United Nations reform by the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research in November 2005. He is currently writing a biography of John Jay.

Professor Raymond was honored by Her Majesty the Queen in 2000 and holds several other awards for public service including a Fellowship of the Royal Society of Arts and Manufactures in London.

9:55 Q and A period

10:15 “Why did Britain Lose the Revolutionary War?” Ray Raymond, USMA

The British lost the revolutionary war for multiple reasons : first, there was a colossal failure of intelligence – political and military – which meant that British commanders never really understood what they were fighting against. Second, poor political leadership at the top. Third, Britain was deeply divided over the war. Divided nations cannot prosecute a war effectively. Fourth, the British had one opportunity to win the revolutionary war by delivering a knock-out blow at Brooklyn in August 1776, but failed to do so. Fifth, the British then compounded their failure of 1776 by abandoning the one sound plan they had to defeat the rebellion and by appointing the wrong commander – Burgoyne – to lead its northern campaign. The defeat at Saratoga was the turning point of the war.

10:55 Q and A period

11:30 Teaching the American Revolution: How Will What You Learned Today Change the Way You Teach the American Revolution – Ray Raymond and Peter
Feinman

12:00 Walk to Grant Hall with stop at United States Military Academy Library

12:30 Lunch in Grant Hall

1:15 Walk back to Lincoln Hall

1:30 Thomas Cole’s View of Fort Putnam: An Immigrant View of the American Revolution on the Eve of the Jacksonian Era – Peter Feinman, IHARE

July 4, 1826 is one of the great unsung days in American history. Americans in the 19th century were familiar with its significance but that memory has been forgotten over time. This talk will address the changes which had occurred in America since the Revolution and the new society that was developing following the end of the wars with England. It was in this context that Thomas Cole, immigrant from England, painted a View of Fort Putnam, a once iconic landmark of the American Revolution now frequently forgotten.

2:30 Teaching the Legacy of the American Revolution: How Will What You Learned Today Change the Way You Teach the American Revolution – Ray Raymond and Peter Feinman

3:00 Bus to Fort Putnam – painted by Thomas Cole

3:30 Bus from Fort Putnam – tour of USMA

4:30 Bus to Thayer Hotel

5:00 Teaching American Revolution Workshop/Journal Writing

6:00 Dinner: The Thayer Hotel
674 Thayer Road
West Point, NY 10996
845-446-4731
http://www.thethayerhotel.com

Perched on a hilltop in Upstate New York, with commanding views of the Hudson River and the United States Military Academy at West Point , The Thayer Hotel is a national historic treasure, visited by past US Presidents, international leaders, and celebrities alike. Located on the hallowed grounds of the Academy, this breathtakingly beautiful West Point hotel lodging is like no other in the world. Come discover a captivating blend of over 200 years of military history with a full array of modern comforts and amenities. There is no grander, better-equipped setting for flawless conferences, elegant weddings, or a thrilling vacation tour of West Point and surrounding Hudson Valley attractions. Experience this landmark among Hudson Valley hotels, a true monument to impeccable style and service.

7:00 An Object of Great Importance: The Hudson River During the American War for Independence – Chris Dipasquale, Mildred E. Strang Middle School, Yorktown, NY

During the American Revolution the Hudson River was not just a waterway. It was a vital artery on which the cause of liberty depended. Along its banks and in its waters many would die for what they believed in. Neighbors would fight neighbors and a serene countryside would become a frightening place where “cowboys” and “skinners” crept through the dark landscape. It was an object at the center of America’s most notorious treason. Benedict Arnold would try to sell the Hudson for his own gain. Both he and the British knew that if it fell the lifeline would be cut and the cause of liberty would drown in its cold grey waters. The struggles of the men who defended it through harsh weather, lagging muster rolls, and ill-designed fortifications could truly say that it was they who continued the cause and birthed a nation.

Lodging: Super8 Newburgh

June 28, Tuesday
Preserving the Past: The American Revolution in the Hudson Valley
Philipsburg Manor
Route 9 Sleepy Hollow, NY.
http://www.hudsonvalley.org/content/view/14/44/

9:15 Keeping Thomas Paine Alive in a Lindsay Lohan World – John R. Wright, Director, Thomas Paine Cottage Museum

In 2010, the Thomas Paine Cottage Museum celebrated its 100th anniversary as an historic house museum. Discover: who was this controversial 18th century writer, what were his contributions to the American Revolution, and what are the steps taken in preserving his legacy and the house that he once owned.

The talk will discuss the challenges in keeping Paine and the Revolution alive for new generations and the problems and success that curriculum and field trips bring to this old historic house. The topic will include the organizational issues that a small historic site must live with and the recent controversial media exchange between two historical groups over proprietary claims to the Thomas Paine legacy.

John R. Wright has been the Director of the Thomas Paine Cottage Museum in New Rochelle, New York since 2000. He has served as an Historical Consultant and Interpreter for such historic sites as Saint Paul’s Church, NHS; Van Cortlandt House Museum; Washington’s HQ/Miller House; and has been involved with Living History programs since 1975. He has a BFA from the New School of Social Research and Parson’s School of Design and freelances as an illustrator on historical subjects and children’s books.

10:15 SYBIL LUDINGTON: Correcting American History – Vincent T. Dacquino

Sybil Ludington earned a place in American History on a rainy night in 1777 when she rode 40 miles through enemy infested woods to summon her father’s regiment to halt a British raid on Connecticut and New York. Though Paul Revere is the most celebrated revolutionary to sound the call to arms, Sybil Ludington’s ride was bolder and far more dangerous, and she was only sixteen years old. This much was known, but with persistence and determination Dacquino describes his ride through an investigation of Sybil’s biography and reveals the truth of her life after the ride.

Vincent T. Dacquino has made numerous appearances at schools and historical sites based on his children’s books and adult biography, Sybil Ludington: The Call to Arms. A “classroom-ready version” of this book, Sybil Ludington: Discovering the Life of a Revolutionary War Hero, for fourth and fifth grade students, was released in May 2008. The book includes exercises in DBQ’s and is published by Purple Mountain Press. More information on Mr. Dacquino can be found at www.VincentDacquino.com

11:15 Revolution’s wake: The changed lives of the enslaved and tenants at Philipsburg Manor in 1783 – Lavada Nahon, Museum Associate, Philipsburg Manor Upper Mills

The Revolutionary War resulted in significant changes in the lives of both the enslaved and tenants of many landowners throughout the colony of New York. At Philipsburg Manor the flight of its Loyalist owner to England continued a wave of change which had begun 30 years earlier with the death of Adolph Philipse, the Manor’s longest living owner.

Lavada Nahon, Museum Associate, Philipsburg Manor Upper Mills has been an employee of Historic Hudson Valley for over eight years. Her knowledge of American history has been enhanced by her work at Philipsburg Manor Upper Mills and Van Cortlandt Manor where interpretive plans extend from the colonial through the New Nation periods of New York. Ms. Nahon lectures on and demonstrates 18th-century foodways through her company Historic Food Works. She has a B.A. in Theatre, from Lindenwood College, St. Charles, Missouri, and also did graduate work in theater at the University of Missouri, Kansas City, Missouri.

12:15 Lunch

1:00 Experience Philipsburg Manor

Cross the bridge over the river into Philipsburg Manor and step back in time. It’s 1750, and Philipsburg Manor is a farming, milling, and trading center owned by the Philipses, a family of Anglo-Dutch merchants. They rent land to tenant farmers of diverse European backgrounds and rely on a community of 23 enslaved Africans to operate the complex.

Interpreters in period costume invite you to stroll through the farm, with historic breeds of oxen, cows, sheep, and chickens. Participate in hands-on activities of the 18th century, and take in a theatrical vignette exploring the riveting yet little-known story of enslavement in the colonial north.

Step into the working gristmill, where, surrounded by the sound of rushing water and the creaking of wooden gears, you learn about the skills of Caesar, the enslaved African miller. A colonial bateau tied to the wharf reflects the flourishing river trade and the skills of Diamond, an enslaved riverboat pilot.

Tour the 300-year-old manor house. Its dairy, kitchens, bedchambers, warehouse rooms and parlor attest to its significance as a place of work, business, trade, leisure, and repose. Period artifacts and touchable reproductions give you an understanding of the people who lived and worked here.

Visit the activity center and explore the foodways, textile production techniques, and medicinal practices of Philipsburg Manor’s inhabitants. Shell some beans, work flax into linen, or produce a tray of ship biscuits. Nearby is the slaves’ garden, with vegetables and herbs for consumption, market, and medicinal purposes.

Enter the new world Dutch barn, thresh some wheat, carry some buckets, or help groom the oxen. With its pastoral setting, rich social history, hands-on activities, and demonstrations of colonial life, Philipsburg Manor provides everybody with an unforgettable experience.

3:00 Andre’s Capture: Walking Tour – Sara Maschia, The Historical Society serving Sleepy Hollow and Tarrytown Patriots Park
121 N Broadway
Tarrytown, NY 10591
914-631-8374

4:15 Horatio Gates: New York’s Forgotten Revolutionary War Hero – James Kaplan
Dobbs Ferry Library
55 Main Street
Dobbs Ferry, NY 10522
914-693-6614
http://www.dobbsferrylibrary.org/

General Horatio Gates was the commanding officer of the American Army at the Battle of Saratoga, which was the most important battle in the American Revolution and the clear turning point of the Revolution. After his decisive victory over British General Johnny Burgoyne, some in the Continental Congress considered him a possible replacement for George Washington. In addition, after moving to New York City in 1790, he played a critical role in the New York City elections of 1800 in which he was candidate on the successful Jeffersonian slate, which defeated the Federalists and paved the way for the election of Thomas Jefferson and the rise of the Democratic party. Ironically General Gates is virtually unknown today particularly here in New York State, so much so that he is buried in an unmarked grave in New York City. His lecture will talk about General Gates and his career and why it is a disgrace that the most important Revolutionary War general buried in New York State is so obscure.

James S. Kaplan is a lawyer walking tour historian who for the past 14 years has every July 4 led an all night walking tour of Lower Manhattan sponsored by the Fraunces Tavern Museum from 2 A.M. to 6 AM., which at 5 A.M. visits the unmarked grave of General Gates and tells the story of the Battle Of Saratoga. He has written extensively on various subjects related to New York City history and led a number of tours of other areas of New York, including Harlem, Hell’s Kitchen and Wall Street. When not engaged in such endeavors, he is the head of the tax and estates department at the New York City law firm of Herzfeld & Rubin, P.C.

5:15 Teaching American Revolution Workshop/Journal Writing
Half Moon
1 High Street
Dobbs Ferry, NY 10522
914.693.4130
www.harvest2000.com

The restaurant offers panoramic views of the Hudson and Manhattan skyline, and sunsets over the Palisades and has been called “the most exciting dining experience in the region.”

6:00 Dinner: Half Moon

7:30 Washington’s Westchester Gamble of 1781, A Turning point for the American Revolution: Raising Awareness of the Roles played by Dobbs Ferry and by Neighboring Localities – Richard Borkow, Dobbs Ferry Historian

Dobbs Ferry Library
55 Main Street
Dobbs Ferry, NY 10522
914-693-6614
http://www.dobbsferrylibrary.org/

In July and August, 1781, during the seventh year of the Revolutionary War, Continental Army troops, commanded by General George Washington, were encamped in Dobbs Ferry and neighboring localities, alongside allied French forces under the command of General Rochambeau. A large British army controlled Manhattan at that time, and Washington chose the Dobbs Ferry area for encampment because he hoped to probe for weaknesses in the British defenses, just 12 miles to the south. But on August 14, 1781, a communication was received from French Admiral de Grasse in the West Indies, which caused Washington to change his strategy.

De Grasse’s communication, which advocated a joint land and sea attack against the British in Virginia, convinced Washington to risk a march of more than 400 miles to the Chesapeake region of Virginia. Washington’s new strategy, adopted and designed in mid-August, 1781, at the encampment of the allied armies, would win the war. The allied armies were ordered to break camp on August 19, 1781: on that date the Americans took the first steps of their march to Virginia along present-day Ashford Avenue and Broadway, en route to victory over General Cornwallis at the Battle of Yorktown and to victory in the Revolutionary War.

Lodging: Super8 Newburgh

June 29, Wednesday
9:00 Washington’s Headquarters State Historic Site
Corner of Liberty and Washington Streets, Newburgh, NY 12551
http://nysparks.state.ny.us/historic-sites/17/details.aspx

Visit the nation’s first publicly owned historic site and tour the rooms where American history was made. In the critical months that General George Washington spent at Newburgh, he made some of his most important contributions to shaping the American republic. It was here that Washington rejected the idea that he should be king after the war; ended the Newburgh conspiracy, preventing military control of the government; created and awarded the Badge of Military Merit, forerunner of the Purple Heart; and circulated a letter to State Governors that influenced the writing of the Constitution.

9:00 Washington – A Man For All Time
9:35 Hasbrouck House Tour and Film
10:30 The Circular Letter: George Washington in 1783 – West Gallery
11:00 Bus to Tappan

12:00 Lunch: The 76 House (proprietor talk)
110 Main Street
Tappan, NY 10983
http://www.76house.com
845-359-5476

The Old ’76 House is not simply one of America’s oldest taverns. Built in 1668, The Old ’76 House had a profound effect on the outcome of The Revolutionary War. Through its long use as a meeting place for patriots, The Old ’76 House established itself as safe ground for Americans when the air was rife with revolution and the tavern itself served as the “prison” of the Revolution’s most notorious spy, Major John Andre. That is why The Old ’76 House is often referred to as “Andre’s Prison”, not a real prison, in fact never having been a place of incarceration for anyone before or since. On the contrary, The Old ’76 House has been a haven for many a weary traveler for more than two hundred years. This great tavern has accommodated on various occasions, every General of the west wing of the Continental Army including Commander-in-Chief General George Washington who, with his chief provisioner Samuel Fraunces, dined in the comfortable atmosphere of The Old ’76 House.

1:00 Washington’s Headquarters
Livingston and Oak Tree Road
Tappan, NY 10983
http://dewinthouse.com

Known as the De Wint House, after the family who owned it during Washington’s visits, it is the oldest surviving structure in Rockland County, New York, and an outstanding example of Colonial Dutch architecture in the Hudson Valley.

Washington’s first stay at the House was from August 8 to 24, 1780, while he was inspecting a redoubt on the Hudson. Major Frederickus Blauvelt, the son- in-law of Johannes and Antje DeWint, who owned the house at the time, invited Washington to stay with the family. Later, when the American Army had moved to Orangeburg, Washington returned on September 28, through October 7, 1780, for the trial and subsequent hanging of the British spy, Major John André. André had been captured after a meeting with American General, Benedict Arnold, at which they made plans to betray the fortifications at West Point.

3:00 Fort Montgomery State Historic Site
690 Route 9W P.O. Box 213
Fort Montgomery, NY 10922
http://nysparks.state.ny.us/historic- sites/28/details.aspx

Fort Montgomery was the scene of a fierce Revolutionary War battle for control of the Hudson River. Visitors today can tour the remains of the 14-acre fortification, perched on a cliff overlooking the magnificent Hudson. On October 6, 1777, British, Loyalist and Hessian forces attacked Fort Montgomery and nearby Fort Clinton. The defending American Patriots, outnumbered 3 to 1, fought desperately until driven out of their forts at the points of the enemy bayonets. More than half of the Patriot forces were killed, wounded or captured. – Guided tour of archaeological excavations of the fort – Video of the re-enactment of the battle – Museum tour

5:00 Constitution Island – Guided Tour: Executive Director Richard de Koster
Entrance via Cold Spring Train Station Parking Lot
http://www.constitutionisland.org

Constitution Island is part of West Point, the United States Military Academy, a National Registered Landmark. The Island is most famous for the Great Chain that was placed across the Hudson during the Revolutionary War and the Warner family who lived on the Island during the 19th century. The Warner House and ruins of the Revolutionary War fortifications are the primary points of interest. The Island’s 280 acres are covered with hiking trails that are enjoyed by the Island’s visitors. The Constitution Island Association was founded in 1916 to preserve and protect the history and traditions of this unique American site.

6:00 Dinner Cold Spring Depot
1 Depot Square,
Cold Spring, NY 10516-3002
(845) 265-2305

Home

Relax overlooking the Hudson River while owner Tom Rolston continues the discussion of defining a community and the role of the train in it.

7:30 Rendezvous with Treason: The Andre/Arnold Conspiracy
Gary “Major General Benedict Arnold” Petagine, Social Studies Teacher, Carmel High School and Sean “Major John André” Grady, Social Studies Teacher, Ardsley Middle School
http://www.treason1780.com

Putnam County Historical Society and Foundry Museum
63 Chestnut Street
Cold Spring, NY
http://www.pchs-fsm.org/

Why did American Major General Benedict Arnold commit treason? Why was British Major John Andre so overly ambitious? What was their correspondence like? What did they say to each other when they met on the banks of the Hudson River? All these questions are answered in this interpretative performance that also reveals their fates.

A teacher for over 30 years, Gary Petagine has been a master teacher for the Living History Education Foundation for 8 years. He is a Colonial/Revolutionary War reenactor with the 5th NY and has portrayed Patrick Henry, Gen. Richard Montgomery, and Sam Adams. Gary co-founded A Living History: The Revolutionary War at Carmel High School.

A teacher for over ten years in Westchester County, Sean Grady’s “living history” approach to teaching has been highlighted in The New York Teacher Magazine and other regional publications. Sean has been a master teacher for the Living History Education Foundation for 8 years. He and Gary created Flight of the Dark Eagle – a course that allows teachers to walk in the footsteps of André and Arnold as their plot of treason unfolded throughout the Hudson Valley. A veteran of the stage, Sean has performed in over 50 theatrical productions across New York State.

The Putnam County Historical Society was founded in 1906 by a group of prominent Philipstown residents and chartered the next year to be the first historical society in the county. Its dedicated early members were prominent Cold Spring residents: A. Augustus Healy, Gouverneur Paulding, William Henry Haldane, Robert Floyd-Jones, and William Wood. Galvanized by the desire to collect and preserve historical and cultural materials pertaining to Putnam County, especially the Philipstown area, and the Hudson Highlands, while both looking back to the nineteenth century and forward into the twentieth, the members initially concentrated on the assemblage of information related to many county families, the compilation of a list of local Civil War veterans, and a study of the milestones on the Putnam County segment of the New York to Albany Post Road. During these early years, the members met in private homes, where objects collected by the society were stored, as well as in libraries, where special programs were held.

In 1960, with funds from the estate of a longtime supporter, the noted writer Laura Spencer Porter Pope (1907-1957), the society acquired the Foundry School building, which was built in about 1830, enlarged in the 1860s, and used for the education of the foundry’s teenage apprentices as well as its employees’ children. In 1971, a wing was added to house the society’s holdings related to the West Point Foundry. Since the establishment of this museum, the society’s members, many of them extraordinarily informed about the history of the Highlands and the county, have continued to dedicate their time and talents as docents, researchers, and educators.

The West Point Foundry, currently owned and run by Scenic Hudson, was a functioning factory from 1818-1911 and was a hub of the Industrial Revolution. It produced steam engines, water wheels and most importantly, the Parrott Gun used during the Civil War, which is basically a small cannon. Abraham Lincoln visited the site in 1862 to check out its firepower (and you can stand where he probably watched a demonstration), and Jules Verne even mentions the site in the 1865 book “From the Earth to the Moon.”

Lodging: Super8 Newburgh

Thursday, June 30
First Reformed Church of Fishkill
1153 Main St.
Fishkill, NY 12524
845-896-9836
http://www.fishkillreformed.org/

The Fishkill area was settled in the early 1700’s by Dutch immigrants who came up the Hudson River in search of a place to make a living. By 1716 they wanted their own Dutch Reformed church so they would not have to cross the river to Kingston or New Paltz to worship. In that year two congregations were established on October 10th: one in Poughkeepsie and one in Fishkill. Poughkeepsie’s church building was finished in 1723, and Fishkill’s in 1731. The first Dominie (minister) who arrived from the Netherlands in 1731 to serve both churches received an annual salary of 70 pounds.

The church was used as a military prison during the American Revolution. The 4th New York Provincial Congress met in the church in 1776, making Fishkill the state capital, until the Congress moved to Kingston in 1777. Part of the New York State Constitution was written in our church.

After the Revolution, a decision was made to enlarge the church and today’s exterior design dates to 1795. A gilded cock, which was placed atop the new steeple at that time, is symbolic of Peter’s denial of Jesus. Formerly found on most Reformed churches, ours is one of the few which remains. The church interior has been remodeled several times.

The 20th century has brought additional changes to the property. A Christian Education building was constructed in 1964, and a Memorial Garden for cremains was added to the cemetery in 1980. The Glenham Reformed Church merged with our congregation in 1976. The sanctuary’s exterior was refurbished for the country’s bicentennial, and interior repairs were completed in 1989. A slate roof was installed in 1997.

The DuBois House, a building with its own history, which was purchased in 1991. Extensive repairs have created beautiful offices and a church parlor, as well as space for meetings. Visitors from around the world come through our doors to visit the church of their ancestors, to trace their roots, and study its history. Our churchyard, behind these buildings, while no longer used for burials, has many well preserved stones dating back to the late 1700’s, and attracts it’s own visitors. As a congregation, we are most proud of our heritage of God’s blessings, and want to share that with all who come.

8:30 History of the Church – Willa Skinner, Fishkill Historian
9:00 Cemetery and Grounds Tour
9:30 Organ Music
10:00 Bus to Van Wyck Homestead

Van Wyck Homestead
504 Route 9
Fishkill, New York

This 1732 structure is today the Van Wyck Homestead Museum. In 1776 it was the home of Isaac Van Wyck. It was requisitioned by the Continental Army for use as an officers’ headquarters.

On the lawn outside the house is a Bicentennial Memorial that commemorates the role of Fishkill in the American Revolution. Sadly, the site of much of this activity has yielded to “progress” in the form of an exit ramp and a mall.

10:15 House Tour
10:45 Grounds Tour
11:15 Saving the Fishkill Supply Depot
11:45 Bus to Mount Gulian

Mount Gulian Historic Site
145 Sterling Street
Beacon, NY 12508
845-831-8172
http://www.mountgulian.org/

In 1783, General Von Steuben was headquartered at Mount Gulian, across the Hudson River from Washington’s headquarters in Newburgh. While at Mount Gulian “The Baron”, as he was often known, learned of the signing of the Treaty of Paris, which meant total victory for the new United States and independence from England. Often a footnote in history, Friedrich Von Steuben emerged from obscurity in Europe to become the unsung hero of the Revolutionary War, making a lasting impact on the Continental Army and American history.

The Society of the Cincinnati was organized on May 13, 1783, at Mount Gulian, in Fishkill, New York, by Continental officers who fought in the American Revolution, including patriot General Baron Von Steuben, whose headquarters was located at Mount Gulian. The Society was the first veterans’ fraternal organization established in the United States. The Society’s original purpose was to facilitate fellowship, friendship and recognition for officer war veterans of the Continental Army. At a time when there were no “veterans benefits” the Society was also created to act as an “insurance policy” of sorts, an institution that collected funds from every member and which would remit benefits to their fellow officers in time of need. The Society also acted as a powerful organization which would lobby Congress for the back-pay and land grants promised to veteran officers of the War.

“Responding to Freedom’s Call: James F. Brown and Three Generations of Verplancks” – Myra Armstead, Professor of History, Bard College

Of all the many personalities connected with Mount Gulian and the Verplanck family, few have led a life as unique and as fully documented as James Brown. Born into slavery as Anthony Fisher, Fredericktown, Maryland in 1793, James Brown escaped from bondage by going north to New York City via the Underground Railroad. It is believed that he left Maryland around 1818, temporarily leaving his wife Julia after the death of their five year old son.

By 1829, James Brown was working full time at Mount Gulian as the estate’s gardener, coachman and general laborer. His detailed journal entries, from 1829-1866 do not reveal his inner thoughts, conflicts or psychology. Instead they read as an amazing record of everyday events and daily chores, local news, farming and weather entries, receipts for work done and favorite recipes. James Brown was a church-going God-fearing man, and many of his Sunday entries are about the sermons he heard in the local churches, of many denominations. He also writes of his trips to northern cities, the local personalities and his voting in local elections. Most of the journal reflects the life of a simple gardener, tending to the soil, planting seeds, harvesting crops, working hard.

His seven-volume journal, kept in narrow receipt books, resides in the New York Historical Society in Manhattan, the extensive record of a free black man living in Dutchess County, NY.

Myra B. Young Armstead is Associate Professor of History at Bard College. She teaches courses in American social history, African-American history, American urban history, women’s history, and ethnic/immigrant history. She received her Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. She has published on the history of African Americans in Saratoga Springs and in Chicago and is at work on a history of African Americans in the resort towns of Saratoga Springs, New York, and Newport, Rhode Island, between 1870 and 1930.

12:00 House Tour
12:30 Barn and Grounds Tour
1:00 Lunch on premises
2:00 Bus to Pride of Hudson

2:15 Pride of the Hudson Cruise with Jonathan Kruk, Hudson River Storyteller
Front Street, Newburgh Landing
Newburgh, NY 12550
845-220-2120
http://www.prideofthehudson.com

Your Hudson River Adventure begins at the Newburgh Landing in Newburgh, NY. Your Captain will present a narration of the sights along the River including Mt. Beacon, Bannerman Island, Storm King Mountain, Breakneck Mountain, The Catskill Aqueduct, World’s End, Cold Spring, and West Point.

Garbed in 1770’s clothes, Jonathan takes students for a tour in tales of New York along the Hudson. Stories span Native, Dutch and English colonial, revolutionary and 19th century times. There are many local geographic references. Curricular goals, like understanding important people and point of view are met as students are engaged imaginatively, through the art of the oral tradition.

Workshops show students how to turn primary source materials into historic fiction. A teacher guide is tailored to your goals.

7:30 Dinner – Albany Pump Station
19 Quackenbush Square
Albany, NY 12207
518 447 9000
http://www.evansale.com/

Welcome to C. H. Evans Brewing Company at the Albany Pump Station, Albany’s premier location for food and hand crafted beer. With up to 10 in-house brews to choose from, The Pump Station is sure to have something for every beer lover. We enjoy creating a warm and friendly atmosphere and want to make your visit a memorable one. Experience the history and atmosphere that makes the Albany Pump Station one of Albany?s most unique venues! The space is simply amazing.

Lodging: Super8 Albany
1579 Central Ave
Albany, NY 12205-2405
518-869-8471

Friday, July 1
Heritage Area Visitor Center
297 Broadway
Saratoga Springs, NY 12866

9:00 Johnny We hardly Knew Ya! Reassessing John Burgoyne and British Strategy before and after Saratoga – Ray Raymond, USMA

10:15 Benedict Arnold: Traitor, Hero or Victim?: A PBS Documentary – Ray Raymond, USMA

12:00 Bus to Saratoga National Historic Park

12:30 Lunch at Saratoga National Historic Park
648 Route 32
Stillwater, NY 12170
http://www.nps.gov/sara/index.htm

1:00 Saratoga Battlefield Video and Exhibit Map
2:00 Saratoga Battlefield Bus and Walking Tour
4:00 Saratoga Battlefield Workshop
5:00 The Battle of Saratoga – Joe Craig, National Park Service
6:00 Dinner: Panza’s with Joe Craig
510 Route 9P
Saratoga Springs, NY 12866
http://www.panzasrestaurant.com

Lodging: Best Western Clifton Park
617 Plank Road,
Clifton Park, NY, 12065

Saturday, July 2
9:00 Battleground for Freedom: New York During the Revolutionary War
New York State Military Museum
61 Lake Avenue
Saratoga Springs, NY 12866
http://dmna.state.ny.us/historic/mil-hist.htm

An overview of the Revolutionary War in New York State. The exhibit includes a British artillery piece captured at Yorktown and other Revolutionary War artifacts.

10:30 The Saratoga Monument National Historic Park
Burgoyne Road (County Route 338)
Schuylerville, NY 12871

The Saratoga Monument commemorates the surrender of the British Army under the command of General John Burgoyne to General Horatio Gates commander of the America forces on 17 October 1777 following the battles of Saratoga. The battles and subsequent surrender are considered a turning point in the American Revolution by leading to French support and the hope of ultimate victory. This lofty sight was chosen for the monument because of its commanding view of the surrounding battlefield sites and its historical association with Burgoyne’s campaign. The cornerstone was laid on 17 October 1877, one hundred years after the British surrender. The capstone was put into place in 1882 and the decorative elements of bronze statues and interior bass relief was finally completed in 1887.

11:30 Schuylerville House National Historic Park
Route 4
Schuylerville, NY 12871

November 28, 1745, on these grounds the French and Indians killed Captain Philip Schuyler and thirty others, burning mills, stores and thirty houses. On June 30, 1747, the garrison of Fort Saratoga was surprised when 45 men were tomahawked and scalped. Site of the house of Captain Schuyler, 1745 and General Philip Schuyler, 1777.

1:00 Lunch: Inn at the Kitchen
184 Broad Street
Schuylerville, NY 12871

2:00 Champlain Canal Tour Boats, LLC
Canal House, End of Towpath
PO Box 9
Lock C5, Routes 4 & 32N
Schuylerville, NY 12871
http://www.champlaincanaltours.com

4:30 Bus to Fort Edward

5:00 Old Fort House Museum
Fort Edward Historical Association
29 Broadway Street
Fort Edward, New York 12828
518 747 9600
http://ftedward.com/History/OldFort/oldFort.htm

The Old Fort House Museum was constructed by Patrick Smyth in 1772 with timbers taken from the ruins of Fort Edward, a French and Indian War fortification. Smythe was arrested at the house in 1777 by General Benedict Arnold for being a loyalist to the British Crown. During the Revolutionary War, the house was used by both British and American troops as headquarters. American General Stark erected a stockade fence around the house and for a time the building was called Fort Stark. It was also used by British General Burgoyne for a short time.

During the American Revolutionary War, in 1777, Jane McCrea was a 17 year old Loyalist living at the farm of her older brother, Colonel John McCrea at Fort Edward, New York in order to be close to her fiancé, Lt. David Jones, a Loyalist serving with British General Burgoyne’s army. On July 27th of that year, while she was visiting the home of Mrs. McNeil, the two women were captured by Indians allied to the British.

Jane McCrea was buried three miles south of Fort Edward. Her death, and those of others in similar raids, inspired some of the resistance to Burgoyne’s invasion leading to his defeat at the Battle of Saratoga. The effect expanded as reports of the incident were used, almost as propaganda, to excite rebel sympathies during the war, especially before the Sullivan Expedition in 1779.

The story became part of American folklore when James Fenimore Cooper described some similar events in his novel “The Last of the Mohicans.” Later on, in 1852, McCrea’s remains were removed and reintured at the Union Cemetery in the Town of Fort Edward. McCrea’s remains were again exhumed in 2003 and researchers were surprised to find that McCrea’s skull was missing, and her bones were commingled with those of another Revolutionary-era woman, Sara McNeil, a landowner and a cousin of British Gen. Simon Fraser. The bodies were exhumed again in 2005 in order to provide separate graves for both women.

6:00 Bus to Union Cemetery
Rte #4
Fort Edward, NY

6:45 Bus to Lake George

7:30 Lake George – on own for dinner
Fort William Henry Hotel & Conference Center
48 Canada Street
Lake George, New York 12845

9:30 Bus to Rutland
Lodging: Ramada Inn
253 S Main St
Rutland, VT 05701
800-311-5192

Sunday, July 3
Hubbardton Battlefield State Historic Site

9:30 The Battle of Hubbardton: Implications for Saratoga – Carl Fuller, Hubbarton Battlefield State Historic Site Educator

Walk the battelfield while hearing about its importance for the Battle of Saratoga and the American Revolution. Hear about the strategy, the battle, life of a soldier, life of the civilians who were living in the area when the battle came upon them, a little about the archeology that has been done to confirm parts of the battle. The field trip programs offered for school groups will be reviewed at this time.

11:30 Ebenezer Fletcher, a Teenage Captive – Carl Fuller

Hear about Ebenezer Fletcher, the fifer and 16 year-old, who was recovering from illness and who was wounded, captured, and then escaped and walked all the way home to New Hampshire. Review a school field trip activity based on Ebenezer Fletcher and his journal and what the students visiting the site who helped create it learned while they were there.

12:30 Picnic lunch

1:30 Visitor Center and Wrap Up

2:30 Program Ends

Dutchess County History Conference

Date: May 7, 2011

co-sponsored by the History, Government & Economics Department, Dutchess Community College and the Institute of History, Archaeology, and Education

Date: May 7
Location: Greenspan Dining Room, Drumlin Building, Dutchess Community College
Cost: $20 (lunch included: mail check payable to IHARE to POB 41, Purchase, NY, 10577
Parking: Lot E
Campus Map:  http://www.sunydutchess.edu/aboutdcc/campusmap.html

Immerse yourself in the history of Dutchess County. Hear its story from the Ice Age to Global Warming. Learn about the people who over the centuries have made the county what it is today. Meet the people who are preserving that legacy and help us to continue to do so in the 21st century.

9:00 Welcome – D. David Conklin, President
Dutchess Community College [invited]

9:15 Students take a Trip in a Time Machine Back 7,000 Years
Stephanie Roberg-Lopez and Tom Lake
Dutchess Community College

Examine the legacy of the first human settlers in what would become Dutchess County. Explore the mysteries of Bowdoin Park. See what the students have uncovered as part of their archaeological training over the past decade. The discoveries of Native American culture dates to at least 7,000 years ago

Stephanie Roberg-Lopez is an Associate Professor in Behavioral Sciences at Dutchess Community College where she teaches Anthropology and Archaeology. She also does cultural resource management consulting throughout New York. She has a BA in Anthropology from Columbia University and an MA in Archaeology from Yale.  roberg@sunydutchess.edu

Tom Lake works for the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation’s Hudson River Estuary Program as its Estuary Naturalist, where he shadows eagles, teaches the ecology of the estuary, and edits the Hudson River Almanac, a natural history journal now in its 18th year. He is an Adjunct lecturer at Dutchess Community College.

10:15 It Really Is Our History:
Dutchess County And The American Civil War
Pete Bedrossian, National Purple Heart Hall of Honor,
New York State Office Parks Recreation and Historic Preservation

Everyone knows that the Civil War occurred in the South – that’s where all the National Park Services sites are located excepted for Gettysburg! But it was the people from the North who fought in those battles and marched in those campaigns and no state contributed more than New York State. Units tended to be based on communities and the soldiers from Dutchess County were no exception to this practice. Come here the story of the 150th New York, the Dutchess County regiment.

Peter Bedrossian has studied the Civil War for 20 years as a Civil War Living Historian and re enactor. He is the military commander of the 150th New York, which is an education association chartered by the Board of Regents. His areas of focus are the 150th New York, “the Dutchess County Regiment” and Civil War Medicine and Surgery. He has made presentations at Gettysburg National Battlefield Park, the Antietam National Battlefield Park, St. Paul’s National Historic Site, local libraries and historical societies as well as providing school programs throughout the region. When not in the 19th century, he preserves our history as Program Director at the National Purple Heart Hall of Honor.

11:15 The Home Front at Roosevelt’s Home Town
Carney Rhinevault, Hyde Park Town Historian

The Home Front at Roosevelt’s Home Town tells an almost entirely forgotten story in wonderful, personal detail: the myriad ways in which people in small town America coped with the challenges, hardships and inconveniences of world war and threw themselves – every man, woman and child of them – into the effort of winning the war by means of civic enterprise. A selection of chapter titles spells it out – “airplane spotters,” “blackout drills and civil defense,” home front industries,” “rationing and shortages,” “victory gardens”, “recycling.” This book presents Anytown USA in wartime. It also tells us about the lifelong home town that was much loved by the Commander-in-Chief. The Roosevelts pass in and out of the narrative with sufficient frequency to add celebrity flavor and worldwide resonance to the initiatives and privations of his “friends and neighbors.”

Carney Rhinevault is the Hyde Park Town Historian, a position once held by FDR. Rhinevault discovered a previously unpublished account of daily doings in Hyde Park and Staatsburg during eighteen months in the middle of World War II written by a career newspaper reporter Helen Myers.

12:15   Lunch

1:15     Preserving the Past in Dutchess County

Saving the Fishkill Supply Depot:
A Call to Action
Lance Ashworth, President, Friends of the Fishkill Supply Depot

Over the past forty years, the overall site has been considerably damaged and fragmented by commercial development. A combination of general contemporary pressure to seek revenue from properties, regulatory, legal and procedural gaps, and historical accident have combined to produce a situation in which the 70 acres of National Register of Historic Places-designated Fishkill Supply Depot land, or at least some parcels within it, have never come under the care of effective custodianship.

Key open space parts of the Fishkill Supply Depot complex are currently up for sale, primed for future commercial development. Still, the opportunity remains for respectful preservation and subsequent interpretation of remaining open space. The preservation of essential properties at the core of the Depot site can happen in our time. It is to this end that we are dedicated.

The Friends of the Fishkill Supply Depot is a not-for-profit organization that advocates the permanent preservation of undeveloped acres within the Fishkill Supply Depot and Encampment, a Revolutionary War site that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The mission of The Friends of the Fishkill Supply Depot includes permanent protection of the Continental Army Burial Complex within the boundaries of the Fishkill Supply Depot, stringent archaeological review of development projects that may affect the site, preservation of archaeological resources associated with the Fishkill Supply Depot during the Revolutionary period, and the future interpretation of the historic site for public benefit.

Restoring the Beacon Railway
Anne Lynch, Mount Beacon Incline Railway Restoration Society

Founded in 1996, the Mount Beacon Incline Railway Restoration Society consists of members from across the Hudson Valley and beyond. This diverse organization is united in its efforts to restore, operate and preserve an integral piece of American industrial, engineering, transportation and leisure history. Incline railway service to the summit of Mount Beacon will offer the public unparalleled vistas and scenic beauty. The Incline Railway will serve as a living museum and centerpiece asset in the restoration of the Mount Beacon summit as a scenic, historic educational and recreational resource.

Anne Lynch is the president and CEO of the Mount Beacon Incline Railway Restoration Society

2:15 Dutchess County: A Community Experience

Dutchess County: A Community of Pots and Transportation
George Lukacs, Poughkeepsie City Historian

Upper Landing: Bridging our Past and Future in Poughkeepsie
Jolanda Jensen and Nancy Cozean

Upper Landing, on North Water Street, is where the Dutch arrived in the 1687 to an outpost in Dutchess County that would become the riverfront to the City of Poughkeepsie. Here, the falls and tributary of the Fall Kill Creek would help drive the mills and commerce of the small hamlet, that later would be the place where the industrial revolution would be launched in the city.

Today there is an effort to save this historic property and the historic sites that sit right under the state’s newest successful tourism site, the Walkway Over The Hudson. This grassroots effort combines a vision of preserving the city’s heritage, and incorporates new green technology as a path for the future.

The presentation will take a how history can help bridge old and new worlds.
Jolanda Jensen is a graduate of the Pace University School of Law and is a professionally trained engineer with extensive regional planning experience.  She is committed to achieving equitable access to housing through the legal system.

Nancy Cozean is the founder of Cozean Communications. As a businesswoman she has more than 35 years experience as an award winning broadcast journalist and public relations professional, specializing in programming, presentations, advocacy and event planning. She formally served as mayor of the City of Poughkeepsie. Most recently she was named Senior Vice President of Public Relations and Government Affairs with ANL LIGHTING, LLC, d.b.a LITGREEN, a LEDs company, based in Poughkeepsie, NY. Additionally she produces and hosts Hudson Valley Views, an award winning local program on the Mid Hudson Time Warner Cable system.

As a professional broadcaster, Ms. Cozean was a reporter and anchor of major markets, including Washington, D.C., St. Louis, Missouri, and Albany, New York. She also helped launch the area’s first televised tourism program, Hudson Valley Magazine’s GETWAWAY (broadcast in New York, New Jersey and Manhattan).  Previously, she was part of a start-up team for the Hudson Valley’s first commercial television station, WTZA-TV (RNN), and also developed and produced weekend programs for Cablevision’s first 24-hour news station in New Jersey, NEWS 12 NEW JERSEY.

Ms. Cozean is a graduate of the University of Missouri School of Journalism, where she earned her M.A. and B.J. degrees. She is also a graduate of Stephens College in Columbia, Missouri, where she received a B.A. She has been an adjunct professor at Dutchess Community College, State University of New York-New Paltz and Marist College.

Restoring a Village Green, Renewing a Community
The Pawling Green Project.
Nancy Tanner (Basic Planning), Bill McGuinness (Green Evolution),
and Karen Zukowski (Art History Vision).

Historic Resource Surveys as a Planning Tool for Communities in the 21st Century.
Kathleen Howe, New York State Historic Preservation Office

Historic resource surveys help raise awareness about historic and cultural resources, provide useful information for municipal planners, developers and property owners, and help protect these resources, providing critical baseline information about historic resources in a specific area. Learn about the State Historic Preservation Office’s (SHPO) recent efforts to enhance survey efforts throughout New York State.

Kathleen Howe is the Survey and Evaluation Unit Coordinator for the New York State Historic Preservation Office (SHPO), part of the Office of Parks, Recreation, and Historic Preservation (OPRHP). She holds a M.A. in Architectural History and Certificate in Historic Preservation from the University of Virginia.

After graduation, she worked in the planning unit of the Peak National Park in the United Kingdom as part of the International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) internship program.  Before joining the SHPO staff, Ms. Howe worked for ten years at Bero Architecture in Rochester, New York preparing historic structure reports and surveys.   She also worked for a non-profit preservation organization in Rochester as curator of two historic house museums.  She began working for the SHPO in 1999 as National Register representative for the New York City territory, working with property owners and interested citizens in listing properties to the State and National Registers of Historic Places.

Under Ms. Howe’s guidance over 200 listings (both individual properties and historic districts) were added to the Registers encompassing over 4,100 properties from skyscrapers and industrial complexes to brownstone row houses and synagogues.  She has shepherded through a number of State and National Register nominations that represent the diverse architectural and cultural landscape of New York City including historic districts for the Lower East Side, Chinatown and Little Italy, Gansevoort Market, Garment Center, Sugar Hill, and Wall Street, among others.  She completed the nomination of over 65 subway stations in celebration of the 100th anniversary of the NYC Subway System.

Ms. Howe has recently spent time evaluating several properties from the recent past including Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, the Look Building, the TWA Terminal, and the World Trade Center site. She is a frequent guest lecturer at Columbia University’s Historic Preservation graduate program.  Since February 2011, Ms. Howe has been head of the SHPO’s newly formed Survey and Evaluation Unit which is responsible for the identification and evaluation of historic properties in New York State as required by the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 and the New York State Historic Preservation Act of 1980.

3:45 Municipal Historian Roundtable: Education and Cultural Tourism
Mary Kay Vrba, Dutchess County Tourism

Mary Kay Vrba CTP, Director of Tourism for Dutchess County has more than 25 years of tourism experience and has the responsibility for marketing Dutchess County as vacation destination. Mary Kay’s job responsibilities include sales and marketing for all publications printed by DC tourism, she oversaw the visitor profile study, grant writer for tourism agency, new product development and the day-to-day-aspects of the agency.

Mary Kay currently serves as President of Hudson Valley Tourism and past President of the NYS TPA Council, Instructor at NYU at the Tisch Center for Tourism, Hospitality and Sports Management, and serves on Eleanor Roosevelt Center at Valkill Board of Directors.

Mary Kay has a master degree from George Williams College in Downers Grove Illinois in Leisure and Environmental Resource .

4:15 Dutchess County School/Historic Organization Collaborations
Peter Feinman, Institute of History, Archaeology, and Education, moderator

Teaching Dutchess County History: A High School Experience – Shaun Boyce, Arlington High School

Shaun Boyce has been teaching social studies at Arlington High School since 2000. Although he has developed course curricula at Dutchess Community College and Marist College, Hudson River Heritage is his first truly original course for a high school audience. He’ll discuss the challenges and rewards of teaching about the Hudson River Valley.

Trunks to Interns: Teaching Local History
Betsy Kopstein, Executive Director of the DC Historical Society

Memories of a Community: Seniors to Seniors Oral History Project
Sandra Vacchio, President, Wappingers Historical Society

The Wappingers Historical Society, in collaboration with Robert Wood, Instructor of The Roy C. Ketcham High School Broadcast Arts Class, has documented stories of the past as told to us by long time Wappingers residents. Each Monday night, throughout March, a different program featuring the reflections of lifelong Wappingers residents was presented. “This has been an incredible opportunity for the students here at RCK,” says, Robert Wood, art educator. “This has truly been a cooperative educational experience and a terrific interaction between students and community. Students filmed and edited these interviews. All involved are very excited about the final products.” An ongoing effort to save history through various mediums, additional video and audio interviews are now in production. One can visit the website at www.wappingershistoricalsociety.org to see photo, post card and glass negative galleries.

5:30 Optional guided walk on the Walkway Over the Hudson: A 21st Century Success Story. Fred Schaeffer, former Executive Director

Walkway Over the Hudson was founded in 1992. Our mission is to inspire people to connect to the beauty of the Hudson Valley through long-term stewardship of the Walkway Over the Hudson State Historic Park and support of the regional trail system, which offer public enjoyment of the bridge’s historic architecture, the scenic wonders of the Hudson River Valley and the diversity of its recreational and cultural activities.