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Hudson Valley Press


September 30th, 2009

African American History in the Hudson Valley



Kingston- As we celebrate the last 400 years of Hudson Valley history during the Quadricentennial year, a look at the specific contributions of Africans and African Americans to the region’s development is one much-needed focus.  A local scholar and expert on African American history in the Hudson Valley, Professor A.J. Williams-Myers, of SUNY New Paltz, will give a talk entitled, There is a River – A Mighty River: Social and Economic Contributions of Africans along the Hudson, from the Dutch Period to the American Revolution.  This talk, at 11:00 am on Saturday, October 3, is the kickoff event for an entire weekend of free programming: Senate House’s African American Culture and History Festival, which takes place from 11:00 am to 4:30 pm on Saturday and Sunday, October 3 and 4.  For more information, please call (845) 338-2786.

 

In his talk, Professor Williams-Myers examines the African at center stage in the unfolding of history along the Hudson River above New York City .  Professor Williams-Myers notes: “Heretofore, the African has been marginal to that history, and his or her social, economic and military contributions have not been adequately integrated into the larger picture.”  There is a River  moves the African from out of the shadows of the margin and into the sunlight of center stage, while succinctly recounting his or her historical role in the unfolding of history along the mighty Hudson River .

 

Professor of Black Studies at the State University of New York at New Paltz, A. J. Williams-Myers is the author of numerous books, including, Long Hammering: Essays on the Forging of an African American Presence in the Hudson Valley to the Early Twentieth Century (1994) and On the Morning Tide: African American History and Methodology in the Historical Ebb and Flow of Hudson River Society (2003). 

 

This lecture is part of a free, weekend-long festival celebrating the cultural contributions of African Americans to the Hudson River Valley, New York, and the nation. Saturday, October 3, and Sunday October 4 will be filled with live music, dance, drama, and spoken word performances, as well as art, hands-on activities, food, and free tours of Senate House and free admission to the Senate House  Museum. Some of the scheduled artists include Voices of Glory, a young a cappella threesome who are finalists on the TV show, America’s Got Talent; renowned performers Kim and Reggie Harris; The Voices of Praise choir; the Ulster County Community Choir, the Energy Dance Troupe; the SUNY New Paltz Step Dancers, Kibola Sougei African Dance Troupe, and historical dramatists Carolyn Evans (as Sojourner Truth) and Terry Gittens (as Bessie Mae).

 

Senate House will also debut its African American Oral History recordings, made recently in collaboration with the Ulstercorps Harvesting a Lifetime Oral History Project, conducted with residents of Ulster County , sharing with us their experiences over the past six decades.

 

These special events are sponsored by the Friends of Senate House, the Palisades Interstate Parks Commission, the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation, the Hudson River Valley National Heritage Area in partnership with the National Park Service and Congressman Maurice Hinchey, and the Hudson-Fulton-Champlain Quadricentennial.

 

Senate House State Historic Site is located at 296 Fair Street , Kingston , NY 12401 .  For more information please call (845) 338-2786, or visit the following website for more information: www.nysparks.state.ny.us.

 

Senate House State Historic Site is part of a system of parks, recreation areas and historic sites operated by the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation, and the site is one of 25 facilities administered by the Palisades Interstate Park Commission in New York and New Jersey .  For further information about this and other upcoming events please call the site at (845) 338-2786 or visit the State Parks website at www.nysparks.com

 

 

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