Quantcast
Channel: Sharyn Flanagan - Hudson Valley One
Viewing all 437 articles
Browse latest View live

The Saugerties Woman’s Club: A greater stake in the world

$
0
0
(Photo by David Gordon)

(Photo by David Gordon)

On Thursday, March 7, 1963, the Ogden Standard Examiner in Utah ran a story in their evening edition about an accomplished woman from Saugerties named Margaret Arnold.

“If it hadn’t been for Charles Dickens,” reads the copy, “Mrs. Dexter Otis Arnold might this minute be the happy homemaker, seeing that her husband got off to the office each morning with a good breakfast under his belt. As it is, Dr. Arnold takes care of himself in Saugerties, N.Y., where he’s superintendent of schools. And Margaret Arnold is living in Washington, D.C., where as president of the General Federation of Women’s Clubs (GFWC) for two years, she directs the extracurricular activities of 11 million women.”

The remark about Dickens is a reference to the origins of the GFWC, when Jane Cunningham Croly, a journalist from New York (a “scribbling woman” in the parlance of the times) was denied admittance to a banquet honoring Charles Dickens at the all-male New York Press Club in 1868. As Saugerties Times detailed recently in an article about the GFWC Monday Club (one of the two active GFWC clubs for women in Saugerties today), Croly’s ban from the press club led to her starting a club for women a year or so later, which in turn led to the founding of the General Federation of Women’s Clubs in the late 19th century, intended to give all the small local clubs around the world a united voice.

Saugerties’ Margaret Arnold was president of the GFWC from 1962-1964. When she stepped down from the presidency of the organization after her two-year term, she returned to her hometown and started the GFWC Woman’s Club of Saugerties in 1966; now in its 48th year and one of the two active GFWC clubs for women in town (along with the GFWC Monday Club of Saugerties).

It was a time when even active women like Margaret Arnold were still referred to as “Mrs. [Husband’s Name].” (The passage quoted in the first paragraph above was the only instance found among numerous clippings where her first name was given.) But as Mrs. Dexter Arnold, president of the GFWC, she was in the papers quite a lot in the early ‘60s, apparently very much in demand as a public speaker and known for her pithy quotes (“Life is hard by the yard, a cinch by the inch”).

At the time, Women’s clubs were the norm. The 1963 article informs us that Arnold supervised 11 million GFWC members; today, according to their website, the club claims one million members. Where Arnold led 15,500 individual clubs in the GFWC 50 years ago, just in the U.S., today the federation represents 6,500 clubs worldwide. That’s still an impressive number, but like nearly all community associations, women’s clubs have seen big declines in the membership rolls.

But even in a time where women often joined service clubs, Arnold apparently felt the need to defend the woman’s club as an institution. “Lots of people misunderstand about women’s clubs,” she said to one reporter in 1963. “It’s hard to find a Lady Bountiful anymore. We do take baskets to the needy, but our real concern is poverty.”

She spoke about how her members were interested in matters ranging from international affairs to school finances. And she was impressed with the mothers that got involved in clubs, knowing what a commitment that requires, musing that “perhaps they feel they have a greater stake in the world.” (While she was the youngest federation president up to that time at age 48, she and her husband never had children.) “Informed women have a great responsibility,” she added. “When you know, you do. When you do, you give. In giving we grow in maturity, in stature and in understanding.”

To one group she spoke to at the time, Arnold explained her philosophy. “The successful woman’s club is not made of women doing something good. They are women good for something,” she said. “Clubs of the Federation should never feel that they are too important to do the small, thankless jobs or too small to take on a big job. There are many opportunities for service.”

According to Lucy Kunst, current president of the GFWC Woman’s Club of Saugerties, that tradition continues.


All about the Girl’s Community Club

$
0
0
(Left to right) Nancy MacDowell, Thomasine Helsmoortel (seated), Colleen Greco, Sherian Thornton, Marilyn Bucher, Lucy Stagich, Mary Ellen Curry, Suzanne LeBlanc, Carol Kaelin, Angela Houlihan, Juanita Wilsey (photo by Doug Freese)

(Left to right) Nancy MacDowell, Thomasine Helsmoortel (seated), Colleen Greco, Sherian Thornton, Marilyn Bucher, Lucy Stagich, Mary Ellen Curry, Suzanne LeBlanc, Carol Kaelin, Angela Houlihan, Juanita Wilsey (photo by Doug Freese)

The Girl’s Community Club of Saugerties is not affiliated with the Boys & Girls Club. Nor is it, strictly speaking, a club for girls at all. Despite what its name suggests, the Girl’s Community Club is actually a club for women. And to clear up any other lingering confusion, the Girl’s Community Club of Saugerties is an independent organization that — unlike the other two women’s clubs in town — is not affiliated with the General Federation of Women’s Clubs (GFWC).

Whew. Well, now that that’s all straightened out, what is there to know about the Girl’s Community Club? According to the records compiled by current member and club historian Sherian Thornton, the club was founded on March 24, 1928 by Elsie Thornton, Rose Sour (Tress), Ann McCormack and Anna Mae Johnson. They held meetings at the Saugerties Community House Hall, where they hosted their first organized event on May 2, 1928: a club dance with music by Montano’s Orchestra for an admission fee of 35 cents.

In wartime, the Girl’s Community Club sponsored a bond booth in the lobby of the Orpheum Theatre, selling an impressive $8,700 in Series E bonds for the cause. They sent care packages throughout the war years to local men and women who were deployed overseas. Each package included a note that read, “ To all of you in khaki and blue, we send this greeting warm and true; our thoughts are with you day by day, while you speed victory on its way. We hope our boxes have brought you cheer.”

Other major fundraisers were an annual Christmas party for needy girls within the Saugerties community, who received clothing and gifts. The club also sponsored an annual bus trip to New York City, a tradition still going on today. They held fundraising fashion shows, Victorian-themed tea parties, gourmet dinner raffles, cookbook creation and sales, sponsorship in walks to fight cancer, flea markets and volunteered to help other nonprofit organizations raise money.

Current club president Marilyn Bucher has been at the helm for two years now and a member of the club for six years prior to that. She says that the Girl’s Community Club that was founded 86 years ago to be “a social environment for young women to share information and support for issues in the community” is still much the same at heart. The times we live in might require doing a few things in a different way, but overall, the goal of service to community within a social club for women remains.

Why does a woman join the Girl’s Community Club? What is she looking for and what does she find?

She is interested in supporting the community and looking for a warm social environment.

When and where are your meetings?

We meet September through June. We take the summer off. Our meetings are on the first Thursday of each month at 7 p.m. at the members’ homes, so we have a cap of 30 people.

How many members are there today in the club?

We have 24 members. Some of them are longtime members, like Dottie Spies, Pat Blundell and Gert Moser, and we’ve actually gotten quite a few new members over the last three-to-five years.

Who are the current members?

Patricia Blundell, Marilyn Bucher (president), Kathy Carroll, Mary Ellen Curry (secretary), Jamie Fine, Mary Frank, Suzanne Frederick, Colleen Greco, Thomasine Helsmoortel, Angela Houlihan (vice-president), Carol Ann Kaelin, Suzanne LeBlanc, Nancy MacDowell, MaryLou McSpirit, Gertrude Moser, Kelly Myers, Patricia Praetorius (treasurer), Dottie Spies, Lucy Stagich, Leeanne Thornton, Sherian Thornton (club historian), Barbara Yosh, Juanita Wilsey, Shirley McLaren and honorary member, Joan Thornton.

Village asks for help planting shade trees

$
0
0
Village shade trees, not currently in shade mode (photo by Will Dendis)

Village shade trees, not currently in shade mode (photo by Will Dendis)

An inventory of all the street trees in the village of Saugerties was initiated last year by the Saugerties Village Tree Commission, paid for by a grant written by commission chair Rosemarie Brackett. The survey, now complete, maps out each tree in the village with its location, species and condition. Many of the trees are in need of removal, damaged over the years by the weather or simply from aging. “Sometimes the tree wasn’t planted in an opportune location to begin with,” said Brackett. “But the philosophy of the Tree Commission is, ‘For every tree that comes down, at least one tree gets planted.’”

But what’s a village to do when there isn’t any money for such a project?

The Tree Commission has a proposal: It will match contributions from residents toward the purchase of new trees dollar-for-dollar. “We know we have a wonderful community here in Saugerties, and people care,” said Brackett. “It’s our community, our village, and we’re losing our trees. We think by reaching out and letting people know there’s a need, we can do this together.”

Some guidelines have been established. The trees have to be planted in the village’s sidewalk tree lawns, not on private property. And any planting of street trees has to be done through the Tree Commission; village code does not allow for residents to plant (or remove) street trees on their own. In addition, the commission also has the last word in determining what type of tree can be planted in any given location – taking into consideration the size of the tree and the tree lawn and whether there are wires overhead. “The objective is to have a healthy, vibrant treescape in the village, not just randomly, without thought, just start planting and then it doesn’t sustain itself,” said Brackett.

Under the matching program, a resident would write a check for half the cost of purchasing, siting and planting a tree. The cost for a new tree is approximately $250, so a resident would contribute $125.

That number allows for the planting of a tree with some maturity. “We plant a minimum two-caliper tree [the trunk is two inches across; the height the tree attains will depend on the species] because once it’s planted it already has an identity and looks like a tree,” said Brackett. “If you plant something too small, you have to support it with a stick and it just doesn’t thrive as well.”

But if $125 for the matching program is out of reach for a resident, the commission welcomes donations in smaller increments, as well, which go into the general fund to be used for planting trees. And of course larger donations are welcome. Ultimately, “the objective is to plant more trees,” said Brackett, so the commission is open to any “workable ideas” from residents. All it takes is a conversation with the tree commission, whose members welcome input from residents.

One option is to memorialize a loved one or a special occasion with the planting of a tree. For an additional charge, a small plaque or stone can be mounted in the soil alongside the tree. Recently a village resident planted a memorial tree for his father, who was a veteran, so it was decided to put the tree near the American Legion post.

Businesses can sponsor trees by making a donation, too. They’ll be acknowledged on the commission’s website and Facebook page as well as in any literature or mailings. The group also does fundraisers like last year’s “Antiques Road Show.”

The Tree Commission’s next event will be held Arbor Day, Friday, April 25, when the group anticipates planting as many as four or five new trees. Last year the commission had funds for just one.

Brackett said the Saugerties Society of Little Gardens club has donated the cost of a tree and they have a generous donation from Adams Fairacre Farms. In addition, the Saugerties Farmers Market has pledged matching funds. The trees will be planted near the market and Cahill Elementary School.

The Saugerties Library will host an Arbor Day program on Saturday, April 26 from 2-5 p.m. The Village Tree Commission has invited George Profous, a senior forester from the Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC), to speak about tree care and maintenance. He’ll do demonstrations on pruning and instruct participants on how to improve the survival of their trees and reduce storm damage to them. The event is free.

Brackett said the commission is always looking for volunteers to be involved at any level, even if it’s just as a village “scout” to find good locations for new trees. Now that this harsh winter is coming to an end, there may be trees out there that were damaged by the weather that the commission doesn’t know about yet, and residents can be helpful in keeping the organization apprised of what they see out there.

For more information, email Rosemarie Brackett at trees12477@gmail.com. Donations in any amount are gratefully accepted. Make checks payable to the Saugerties Village Tree Commission, Village Hall, 43 Partition St., 12477. For more information, visit www.saugertiestreecommission.wordpress.com.

A burst of color

$
0
0
Mandolyn Wilson Rosen, The Mantle of Insomnia, 2014, acrylic and collage on canvas, 18 x 24 inches

Mandolyn Wilson Rosen, The Mantle of Insomnia, 2014, acrylic and collage on canvas, 18 x 24 inches

The sentiment seems to be universal this year: After the harsh winter we’ve endured, it’s time now to get out and go places again. And what better way to shake the monochromatic tones of winter out of our psyches than to go view some colorful art?

Two new art exhibits opened this week in the village. The Saugerties Public Library is showing Beth Humphrey’s “Imaginary Botany,” delicate watercolor paintings suggestive of botanical forms. The Imogen Holloway Gallery on Partition St. is exhibiting a dual show of vividly energetic mixed media work by artists Mandolyn Wilson Rosen and Pier Wright.

 

Imaginary Botany

The whimsical watercolors by Saugerties-based Beth Humphrey on exhibit in “Imaginary Botany” have the spontaneity of ink blots while suggesting the controlled qualities of a botanical illustration. While the works carry titles that relate to a nature-based inspiration (“Spring,” “Roots,” “Gather” or “Rain,”) they depict a somewhat abstracted view of imagined forms rendered in a candy-box palette on notebook paper or watercolor paper. In the “Seeds” series, the roots of a plant resemble a head of hydrangea blossoms growing upside-down.

Humphrey has this to say about her process: “I wanted to paint or collage each idea alone, thinking about details and parts of plants, roots, seeds and the invisible exchange of energy. Taking each piece as if it has been placed on a table for examination, or under a microscope, focusing my attention on configuration. The images are details, separated and screened away from the whole. I work in watercolor because it lends itself to unfolding, evaporation, leaching and absorption.”

Humphrey has been the education curator at the Woodstock Artists Association & Museum in Woodstock since 2007, coordinating educational outreach into three area school districts, providing programming for home-schooled students and partnering with Ulster BOCES on teacher development countywide. She is also founder and president of Saugerties Art Lab, which provides free and low-cost arts programs for area youth. Humphrey is an exhibiting artist and received her BFA from Minneapolis College of Art and Design.

The gallery space at the Saugerties Public Library is divided between the walls downstairs and those flanking the elevator upstairs. The library changes exhibits every three months; beginning in January of 2015, that will be reduced to two months to allow for more exhibits.

The library will dedicate and officially re-name its gallery in honor of the late Steve Crohn on Sunday, April 27 from 1-3 p.m. Crohn initiated the Arts & Exhibits Committee as a member of the Library Board and founded the gallery to support exhibition space for local artists. “Imaginary Botany” remains on view through the end of June at the Saugerties Public Library at 91 Washington Ave. For more information, visit www.bethhumphreyart.com or www.saugertiespubliclibrary.org.

 

New works at IH Gallery

The Imogen Holloway Gallery at 81 Partition St. is exhibiting a dual show of dynamic mixed media works by Northport, Michigan-based Pier Wright and Saugerties’ Mandolyn Wilson Rosen. As with prior shows at IHGallery, the artists are paired in an exhibit in small part because one is local and the other is from a distance away (creating a dialogue between our area and others), but in larger part because gallery owner Diane Dwyer’s curatorial eye finds a visual connection between the two artists in which the viewing experience of each is enhanced by its juxtaposition with the other.

The works on exhibit by Wright are color-packed with strong gestural effect. The artist used acrylic paint on Duralar (Mylar’s sturdier cousin, as Dwyer explains) then cut his expressive marks out and reassembled them in layers supported by a Masonite panel cut to the outer (irregular) borders of the work. Textural effects come into play when the artist assembles some of the Duralar pieces in reverse so that the brushstrokes disappear.

Wright runs his own gallery in the Saginaw, Michigan area during the summer months where he represents a number of contemporary artists. The winter is for his own work. Regular visitors to IHGallery may remember Wright’s work included in last year’s “What I Like About You” exhibit when the space hosted a group show of works in collaboration with a Brooklyn-based gallery. Wright has an extensive exhibition history and his work is in many prominent collections.

Mandolyn Wilson Rosen also frequently exhibits and has a BFA from Cornell University and an MFA from Bard College. The works she contributed to the exhibit in Saugerties combine collage with acrylic paint on canvas or wood panel.

In an interview last year, the artist spoke about working with the idea of “haptic space” (relating to the sense of touch). “It can make the work suddenly jump into the room and pick up on the stuff around it,” she said. In “Smells Like Rain,” the viewer sees a striped collaged form, suggestive of a shirt blowing on a clothesline, which somehow seems to evoke that feeling of a summer day when impending rain is in the air. Eyes are another motif that Rosen uses, she says, to make the patterned surface feel “inhabited.” In “The Mantle of Insomnia,” several collaged eyes gaze back at the viewer in a slightly surrealistic image.

Gallery-goers can hear Rosen speak for herself about her work at IHGallery on Friday, April 18 at 7 p.m. in an artist talk. The event includes an informal “bring-what-you-wish” potluck dinner.

Next month IHGallery will celebrate its second anniversary with “Top Drawer,” an exhibit of work from the gallery’s flat files. Visitors to the space can always find drawers full of unframed works on paper to peruse (an affordable way to buy art, in fact) but this time around, the works will come out to play on the walls, pinned up in profusion. An artists’ reception will be held on Friday, May 2 from 6-9 p.m.

The current show remains on view through Sunday, April 27. Imogen Holloway Gallery is located at 81 Partition St. in the village. Gallery hours are Thursdays 3-8 p.m. and Friday through Sunday noon to 5 p.m., or by appointment. For more information, visit www.ihgallery.com.

Kristy Bishop: Confidently creative

$
0
0
(Photo by Sharyn Flanagan)

(Photo by Sharyn Flanagan)

Another constant will be the annual art show of student work, to be held this year at the Dutch Ale House at 253 Main St. This will be the 24th annual exhibition that Bishop has organized for her budding artists. The theme this time around will be “Transportation.” (Bishop’s own pastel rendition of a 1958 Cadillac will be included in the show.)Longtime Saugerties resident Kristy Bishop is well known around town as a supportive and nurturing art teacher who brings out the inner creative spirit in both kids and adults. But don’t look for her on Main St. anymore: Bishop recently relocated her home and studio to 147 Market St. in the village. She’s excited about making a fresh start there, she says, but one thing that won’t change is her emphasis on providing a positive atmosphere and plenty of encouragement to her students.

An opening reception will be held on Saturday, May 3 from 4–6 p.m. Awards will be given out at 5 p.m. The exhibit remains on view through Monday, June 30, during regular restaurant hours, daily from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.

The adult artists participating in the show are Agnes Barber, Patrick Buonfiglio, Ruth Bach-Dhondy, Teresa Herzog, Awilda Jimenez, Phyllis McCabe, Donna Newkirk, Mary Rell, Michael Saporito and Patricia Steyer along with Bishop.

The junior artists range in age from eight through 11. They are Mark Danza (11), Sage Fanelli (10), Sydney Henson (10), Kyla Misasi (11), Matthew Morgan (11), Caitlin O’Brien (11), Amrita Raval (9), Etolie Steinlage (11), Autumn Stever (13) and Cassidi Vedder (8).

Over the years, says Bishop, she has guided more than 1,000 beginning art students through the process of learning to draw and paint. They’ve been as young as six years old and her student roster currently boasts an octogenarian, Patrick Buonfiglio.

The spiritually guided Bishop says that teaching art has been one of the main purposes in her life since she began giving lessons in Saugerties in 1977. “I can tell you that I look forward to every class that I teach. It is amazing to watch the progress of people who did not know that they had talent but gave themselves permission to find out.”

Bishop believes in encouraging children to develop their creativity at a young age. Young artists, she says, also need to be able to speak in public about their artwork and have the ability to explain the process that went into it. Bishop has been a member of the Kingston-Rhinebeck Toastmasters Club since 2008, an affiliation that has inspired her to encourage confident public speaking and leadership skills in her students.

Bishop provides supplemental activities for her students to broaden their knowledge of art. Her new studio has a large television screen that was put to good use recently for “Dinner and a Movie” night when young students and their parents ate pizza and watched a film about the American Impressionist painter Mary Cassatt. Bishop plans to continue the series for her students to encourage their artistic development.

And she likes to involve the parents with the children’s activities at the studio. “We play art games where the parents learn art terms and techniques to be able to answer questions correctly and garner points along with their children toward winning small trophies as prizes. This way, when the families go to the annual art shows, they have a better understanding of what goes into a painting and have a greater appreciation of the whole program. Everyone learns how to frame artwork properly, too.”

When it comes to her adult students, Bishop says, “they’re not afraid to give me constructive criticism on my approach to teaching. I respect their opinions and understand that it is out of wisdom that they guide me so lovingly.”

Bishop’s adult student Michael Saporito is a professional photographer, but says that he wasn’t sure when he began taking classes whether he could learn the skills to paint a picture. “I didn’t know how to mix colors, what brushes to use or even how to hold them.” But after a few classes with Bishop, he says, “things started to take shape in the painting I was working on and I was pleased with the results. Her technique and painting tips for whatever medium we are working in are very helpful and produce quick results.” Saporito cited Bishop’s “non-judgmental attitude” as making class time “fun and rewarding.”

The adult classes participate in extracurricular activities, too, going to galleries and talks by other artists as a group.

“I don’t understand why it is so exciting to push paint or pastel around on a surface,” says Bishop, “yet I am most happy when I do it. The others at my studio feel the same way.”

Kristy Bishop was born in 1951 in Fort Fairfield, an area of northern Maine known for its fertile potato-producing soil. Her parents came from generations of farmers, but they appreciated Kristy’s artistic abilities early on and arranged for her to take private art lessons.

By 1973, Bishop had moved to Saugerties and was studying art at the Art Students League in Woodstock (located at the time in the buildings that now house Woodstock School of Art). While teaching Sunday School at Grace Community Church in Lake Katrine in 1977, Bishop’s aptitude for working with young children prompted an observer to suggest she give art lessons to kids.

Bishop opened her studio doors in Saugerties to teach and has never looked back.

And she still studies art herself. “I go for art classes with other artists, too. I study oil painting with Mary Anna Goetz and others so that I can learn more, but also to feel what it is like to be a student so that I can be a better teacher.”

Teaching comes naturally for her, Bishop says, “but a real mentor needs to be capable of instilling confidence in the student. I am passionate concerning my mission as a teacher.”

As a person guided by her spirituality, Bishop seeks out the uplifting. She wrote a newspaper column profiling inspiring and aspiring artists for years: “Kristy’s Kreative Kids,” which began at the Saugerties Post Star in the mid-1990s and later moved to the pages of Saugerties Times under then-editor Vern Benjamin.

Bishop has one daughter, Stacey, 32, who lives in the Albany area and works in the healthcare field.

The Kristy Bishop Studio at 147 Market St. is open by appointment only. For more information about classes, call (845) 246-8836, email kristy@kristybishopstudio.com or visit www.KristyBishopStudio.com.

In Memoriam: Marie Post

$
0
0

marie post HZTLongtime Saugertiesian Marie Post died Friday, Feb. 20 at Kingston City Hospital. Still active in the community at age 90 — and still managing the town transfer station and the animal shelter she helped to establish — Post is being remembered today by those who knew her best as someone who loved her community, loved to help people and animals, and “just never stopped,” as her daughter, Jean Marie Fellows, puts it.

Post was of that generation that retained modesty about their accomplishments; when I spoke with her in 2012 to write a profile about her for this newspaper, she downplayed her role in making Saugerties a better place to live. “When I came here as a young girl,” she told me, “Saugerties was very good to me. I was a stranger, and they were very kind.” From that point on, it seems, Marie was intent on returning the favor.

Compassion was the quality she told me she most enjoyed finding in other people, and her achievements speak to that in the way she lived her own life. Best known, perhaps, for her work with animals, Post also devoted a great deal of her time to projects that benefitted senior citizens and the underprivileged, and she served for 11 years on the Saugerties Town Board. Her efforts over a lifetime led to the Saugerties Area Chamber of Commerce honoring her with their Lifetime Achievement Award in 2014, and the same year she was named Ulster County Senior Citizen of the Year.

“You get a good feeling helping people,” she said in our 2012 interview. “We’re public servants; it’s really to help people, and that’s what we’re here for. And if we can’t help people, we can refer them to someone, so that they can get help of some kind. We do what we can.”

The daughter of the late William and Ada Gowing Stage was born May 24, 1924 in Mountain View, New Jersey. Her family moved to Jersey City shortly afterward. Marie’s first experience with Saugerties was attending summer camp here as an 11-year-old. Over the course of the summers that followed, she returned as a camper and met her future husband, Claude Post, a teenager at the time working at the camp. They married 73 years ago on the fourth of July, and raised five children in Saugerties.

“We’re a very close family, and we had a wonderful, simple childhood filled with loads of memories,” says Fellows. “Every Sunday after church, my father and mother would put all five of us children in the back of the car to take us for a ride, and we would sing the entire time. We’re so grateful to have had the childhood that we had.”

Claude, a mechanic, operated his own garage while Marie stayed at home with the children until the youngest was old enough to go to school fulltime.

“She was an amazing mom, and she was a perfect role model,” says Fellows. “She was kind-hearted — always helping the animals, of course — and always eager to learn. She even went back to Ulster County Community College as an adult and took evening courses; she received straight As and was on the Dean’s List. And in recent months, even though her body was slowing down, her mind never missed a beat.”

Marie’s path to running the animal shelter in Saugerties began when she went to work at the Saugerties Animal Hospital as a receptionist and veterinary assistant before moving on to South Peak Veterinary Hospital in Saugerties, where she worked at the front desk for 19 years. When she was elected in 1992 to the Town Board — a position she would hold until 2003 — the town supervisor at the time suggested that with her background in veterinary work and having served on the board for the Ulster County SPCA, she should become the Town Board’s liaison to the animal shelter.

Marie went on to manage the town transfer station as well as serving in the role of animal control officer, on call 24/7 to take those calls about stray dogs in the middle of the night; responsibilities she was still carrying out at the time of her passing. She maintained a food pantry for pets at the shelter so that animal lovers in financial straits never had to choose between feeding themselves or feeding their pets, and she kept up the Animal Emergency Fund she established in 1999 to subsidize spaying and neutering costs and to provide for medical treatment of sick and injured animals in cases where the owners were financially unable to cover the costs. Marie also organized twice-yearly tag sales to benefit the shelter.

Friends of Historic Saugerties offers local history buffs a new resource

$
0
0
The group’s logo, showing the falls over the Cantine Dam and nearby industry, was taken from a 19th-century bank note

The group’s logo, showing the falls over the Cantine Dam and nearby industry, was taken from a 19th-century bank note

“Here’s a question for you,” says Gus Pedersen, furniture designer and local history buff. We’re talking about obsolete occupations that show up in historical documents but nobody knows what they are anymore. “What did a calenderer do?”

Hmm. Keep track of important dates? Create calendars? No, as Pedersen explains, in paper manufacturing, calendering is the process of smoothing the surface of the paper by pressing it between rollers called “calenders,” which prepares the paper for printing. A calenderer was the man who did this work before technology took over the process, and in the Saugerties economy of the late 19th century, when the Cantine Paper Company was one of the major employers in town, it was a valued profession.

And that type of historical information — those small but telling details that reveal what day-to-day life was really like for those who came before us — is the type of thing likely to turn up as the topic for a discussion at a future meeting of the Friends of Historic Saugerties, a newly formed group that meets on the first Saturday of each month from 2-4:30 p.m. in the community room at the Saugerties Public Library. Anyone interested in local history is welcome to attend, and there are no dues or membership required. An agenda will be in place at each meeting with two 45-minute presentations given on topics of local history, with time allowed for discussion and questions.

The first meeting of the group in February attracted 35 people, says Pedersen, one of the group’s founders, and they expect to have at least 50 attend the next meeting on Saturday, March 7 at 2 p.m., when the presentations will include one by author and musician Mark Anderson, who will speak about Band Camp in the Pine Grove hamlet, notable as the summer home of the Ernest Williams Music Camp from 1931-1947. Following that discussion, Rich Davis, who has family roots in the Flatbush section of Saugerties going back to the 18th century, will share some of his research on Flatbush history.

And “sharing” seems to be the operative word here. Pedersen emphasizes that the Friends of Historic Saugerties is a “coordinated, interactive” effort within the community for people interested in history to exchange knowledge and ideas. “If somebody, for instance, has an old farm and has done some research about its history, we’d be interested in you standing up and giving us what you found. And it doesn’t have to be the perfect PowerPoint presentation.”

And if somebody wants help with their historical research, Petersen adds, “We have knowledgeable people in the group who can help you out.”

Presentation topics do not have to be Saugerties-specific, but any subject discussed should have some relevance to Saugerties history. For example, a future presentation on slavery in the Hudson Valley isn’t about Saugerties but is applicable to the region. And another upcoming presentation planned for August on how to use the county archives to search historical records is applicable to Saugertiesians along with everyone else in Ulster County.

The Friends of Historic Saugerties started last fall after Pedersen attended a course on the history of Saugerties at Lifespring, the adult learning community. There was a different presenter for each of six sequential weeks, he says, one of whom was local historian Michael Sullivan Smith. “It got really interesting, and I asked some questions. He said, ‘Why don’t you join our monthly meeting at the library; we meet the first Saturday of each month at 2 p.m. and talk history.’” That group, known as the Saturday History Group, ended up providing the basis for the current Friends of Historic Saugerties.

In the effort to create a more structured group with a set agenda, four of the regular attendees of the Saturday History Group sessions — Arzi McKeown, Gus Pedersen and Rich and Susan Davis — got together with Chester Hartwell and Michael Sullivan Smith, the primary organizers of that group, and set about to reinvent it. “We’re still in the process of setting up the guidelines and formalizing who is responsible for stuff, but we’re moving along,” said Pederson. “We’ve created a ‘steering committee,’ which is open to anyone willing to take an active part and not just suggest things that we ought to do.” One subject the group has decided they will not talk about, says Pedersen, is politics, including current local disputes about historic designations and such.

 

Upcoming presentations

The April 4 meeting of the group will highlight the Saugerties Lighthouse, with a presentation given by Anna Berkheiser, co-keeper of the lighthouse along with husband Patrick Landewe. Following her talk will be local resident Penny Milford, who will speak about the research she’s done on her home, particularly the family that once lived there.

Presentations on May 2 will be on earthy matters, with geology professor Robert Titus speaking about the geology of the Hudson Valley. Titus and his wife, Johanna, are authors of “The Hudson Valley in the Ice Age: A Geological History & Tour.” The other presenter at this meeting, Peter Roberts, is also well known to those interested in local history; his talk will address Ulster County history through the bluestone industry in the region.

Gus Pedersen will give a presentation at the June meeting on furniture styles of the late 19th century and the Arts and Crafts Movement of the time, followed by a discussion with Rev. Michael Phillips, vicar at Trinity Episcopal Church, who will talk about how the church acquired its stained glass window by William Morris, one of the chief proponents of the Arts and Crafts style.

There will not be a meeting in July, because the first Saturday of the month falls on the Fourth of July holiday. Pedersen says they plan to stick to the first-Saturday-of-each-month schedule so that people will automatically know when a meeting will take place. August will feature a talk on the history of roads in our area — who decided where they would be placed, who paid for them, when did the state become involved in maintaining them — along with the discussion on how to use county archives. September will feature historical reenactor Dean Barnes in character, talking about life as a ferryboat captain, and the Kingston Sea Chantey Singers (Dean Barnes, Scott Berwick, Sam Falcinelli, Jacque Helmer, John Helmer, Bob Lusk, Rick Mahler and Gus Pedersen), who will sing nautical folk music and talk about its history.

More info is available at “I Like Saugerties” at Facebook.com/ILSaugerties. The group also shares information on upcoming events via email.

Two art exhibits open in the village of Saugerties

$
0
0
Fox in Flower Garden by Elin Menzies

Fox in Flower Garden by Elin Menzies

Grist Mill Gallery

Saugerties-based artists Elin Menzies and Prue See are exhibiting their work at the Grist Mill Gallery, located at Grist Mill Real Estate at 265 Main St. There will be an opening reception on First Friday, March 6 from 5-7 p.m. The show will remain on view through May 15 and can be viewed during regular business hours.

Menzies will show her paintings of foxes, which are inspired by the mythology of many cultures. “My fox paintings are influenced by those stories and also by some magical experiences I’ve had with foxes,” she says. “I strive to put that magic into my paintings of them.”

See paints places with deep historic roots, finding ways to connect with her childhood in England growing up in a family whose every move was referenced historically. Her paintings of buildings enshrine memories and suggest story, she says. Her paintings of buildings in Saugerties will be featured in the exhibit. See has painted buildings in Cornwall and Oxfordshire, England, Wales and Vermont.

 

Ship Spiral by Garry Nichols

Ship Spiral by Garry Nichols

“Water Witch” art exhibit at Cross Contemporary Art

Cross Contemporary Art at 81 Partition St. in the village will host an opening reception on Saturday, March 7 from 6-8 p.m. for the new exhibition of work by Garry Nichols, “Water Witch.” The exhibit will remain on view through April 5.

Garry Nichols solo exhibition of paintings, drawings and sculpture will transform the gallery into an environment of nautical and botanical fantasy, reflecting his far-ranging fascination with water divining, sailing ships, tropical plant life and Aboriginal art. Nichols is a prolific artist who plays with the paradox of scale: what should be big is very small and what should be small is enormous, creating a fantastic distortion that torques pictorial space. The feeling of far-off lands — maybe even the most far-off land of Nichol’s native Tasmania — lends his art a sense of adventure and discovery of a new state of nature.

“Mr. Nichols is a wordless storyteller whose art follows the flow of form much as the divining rod discovers the unseen stream of subterranean water,” says gallery director Jen Dragon. “It’s exciting to surrender the gallery for an installation of such breadth and ambition.”


Local school superintendents: ‘We need more state aid’

$
0
0

cuomo-dollar-slide

It was a call for action from eight school districts in Ulster County. Their school superintendents, board members and administrators met at a forum in New Paltz last Friday, March 6. Each took the podium in turn at the Ulster BOCES conference center to discuss the impacts of the state aid cuts on their students and communities. They were “preaching to the choir” in the broadest sense, in that the audience was composed primarily of other school officials, educators and their supporters. The broader purpose of the gathering was to enlist the support of Ulster County taxpayers, on whom they claim the burden for funding the schools is being increasingly shifted.

Countywide, 65 cents of every dollar spent on education is raised by local taxes, said Ulster BOCES district superintendent Charles Khoury. State aid covers the remaining 35 cents. Prior to the recession, that spread was much smaller. In Saugerties, state aid has fallen from a high of 43 percent of the total in 2007-2008 to 34 percent this year. This is typical. It’s the local taxpayers who are making up the difference, Khoury said.

The governor has tied state aid to structural changes and other kinds of reform of the public schools. Schooling in New York State is the most expensive in the nation, he has pointed out.

With the governor’s budget due April 1, school officials at Ellenville, Highland, Kingston, New Paltz, Onteora, Rondout Valley, Saugerties and Wallkill districts are actively petitioning Andrew Cuomo to restore school funding to former levels. Each of the districts is requesting support from its community in the battle. Each has a link on its website to a petition asking the governor to put a stop to the Gap Elimination Adjustment (GEA) used in the process of determining state aid for public education.

The GEA was enacted six years ago by Albany lawmakers to eliminate a $10-billion state budget deficit. And it has worked. But in diverting funds from public education to bail out the state, the districts claim, the GEA has cost them $8.5 billion in state aid . Now that the state budget deficit no longer exists, say school officials, why is the GEA still in place?

Locally, the eight school districts primarily in Ulster County says the enactment of the GEA has meant a loss of $116 million in aid. This has resulted in “a story of missed opportunities,” said Khoury, through the impact of program cuts, larger class sizes and reduced educational and support staffing.

 

Saugerties Superintendent Seth Turner said his district lost 50 positions along with $13.4 million in state aid. And like other districts, it’s had to resort to using its fund balance, “which meant,” he continued, that “whenever we had bills, we had to take out a tax anticipation note or a revenue anticipation note, which meant in turn that the banks were making the money off of us not having the money.” Not only do the charter schools benefit from the current situation, said Turner, but the financiers benefit as well.

In 2008-2009, the local taxpayers contributed 56.6 percent of district revenue. Currently, the local tax burden is 63.5 percent. “It’s not that spending has gone through the roof, it simply demonstrates the reductions in state aid,” said Turner.

Turner said it was important for leaders to take aggressive action: “It’s unacceptable to sit back and do nothing.” He praised the coming together of the group assembled at the forum, and defended the decision of districts to offer a link on their websites to petitions asking Albany for education finance reform. He referenced an email from Saugerties Times editor Will Dendis to School Board President George Heidcamp asking whether political lobbying was a permitted use for the home page of the district website. “And what my board president said to me, was, ‘If this is a mistake that I’ve made on behalf of the children, if this is a mistake that I’ve made on behalf of the taxpayers, then I’ll make that mistake over and over and over again.’”
New Paltz’s school district was represented at the forum by Richard Linden, assistant superintendent for business, and Ruth Quinn, board vice president. “Because of the Gap Elimination Adjustment,” Quinn said, “New Paltz is being slowly starved of resources.” She blamed the district’s reduction of staff by 46 positions in the past five years on the loss of $9.1 million in state aid funding. “It’s meant that we’ve had to defer maintenance on our buildings, resulting in emergency repairs,” said Quinn. “It’s meant that we’ve had to cut our facilities staff to the bare minimum, and it’s beginning to show. And we no longer have a front desk person who greets people and looks at IDs.”

But while the statistics involve millions of dollars lost, said Quinn, the cuts have also had an impact on the district’s relationship with the community. “We’re running out of places for significant reductions and we’ve had to use our fund balance,” she said. “This has caused our district to be designated as being in moderate fiscal stress by the [state] comptroller, and this is incredibly upsetting when you consider that we’re doing exactly what Cuomo has asked us to do: use the fund balance. And as a result of following this advice, our community is questioning our fiscal decisions.”

In her 18 years working in her district, Ellenville Superintendent Lisa Wiles said, she’s never before seen a political climate like the one that exists today. “School communities all over are being vilified, blamed and punished. It’s really unconscionable and it’s not right,” she said.

Referring to reports from the governor saying there have been increases in financial aid in recent years, Wiles responded, “Let’s take the spin out. If you look at the numbers for 2013-2014, it looks like an increase [compared to the years preceding], but [in comparison to pre-GEA levels], it’s not an increase; you can say it’s an increase from the decrease. And this isn’t unique to Ellenville; it’s true for every school district in the state.”
Several of the speakers at the forum decried a perceived politicization of education in New York. “This clearly is a pattern of wanting to get rid of public education,” said Wallkill schools Superintendent Kevin Castle. “When you are taking away the monies that we are dependent on to provide services to our students, what will happen is that you have to shut down.”

It was no different than a homeowner, he argued, who goes into foreclosure if they lose their income and can no longer afford their mortgage. “Quite frankly, since all this began six years ago, I’ve believed that this is the goal of our state,” Castle said, “to decrease the amount of public schools and add the charter schools.” The Wallkill district has shed 38 staff positions and $16.5 million in state aid since 2009-2010.

The Highland district has lost 18 positions and $8.4 million in state funding since 2010. It too has had to dip into its fund balance to stabilize the budget. The Highland district currently receives 21 percent less state aid than it did in the 2009-2010 school year, said Superintendent Deborah Haab.

“That is huge,” said Haab. “Our students and our taxpayers need those state aid dollars restored. And the shift of the cost to the Highland community, to the Ulster County community as a whole, is unacceptable.” With the governor’s budget due on April 1, she urged, “The time for us to act is now. We must not continue to let our children be a pawn in Albany politics. There’s no financial reason to continue the GEA; it’s a political reason, and our children’s education should never be politicized.”

 

Saugerties group to hold forum on school funding, testing

$
0
0

preschool SQ“If you talk about education today in most communities, it’s all about taxes,” says Jennifer Mangione. “A lot of people are upset about paying school taxes, but do they realize how much money our schools have lost in state aid to the Gap Elimination Adjustment (GEA)? And how Gov. Cuomo is tying school aid to his reforms? We say, as a group, that it pays to talk about something other than taxes in education.”

The “we” Mangione refers to is PACE Saugerties (People Actively Committed to Education), a grassroots coalition she and other local parents formed in 2012 to initiate dialogue about the educational system. “And we allow for a conversation to take place in an open way that a Board of Education meeting can never do,” she says.

PACE Saugerties also wants to offer parents strategies to fight back against what they say is an attack on public education coming from Albany, with its diminished school aid funding and increasing support for charter schools.

PACE Saugerties will sponsor a public forum on Wednesday, March 25 at 7 p.m. at the Frank D. Greco Senior Center at 207 Market St. There will be four speakers on the panel available to answer questions.

Saugerties High School Key Club members will be present to provide babysitting services during the session in order to free up parents to participate.

The panel of speakers includes Billy Easton, executive director for the Alliance for Quality Education; Heather Roberts, a parent and vice-president of the Bennett PTA in the Onteora Central School District; Bianca Tanis, a parent and special education teacher in the New Paltz Central School District and founding member of New York State Allies for Public Education (NYSAPE) and Anna Shah, a parent and attorney with experience in education policy who is also with NYSAPE.

Attendees at the forum are welcome to ask questions about any aspect of the current educational system but the focus will be on the Gap Elimination Adjustment (GEA) and its role in school funding and on parents’ rights in refusing high stakes testing.

The Gap Elimination Adjustment (GEA) was enacted six years ago by Albany lawmakers to eliminate a $10-billion state budget deficit. Beginning with the 2009-2010 school year, the state deducted from each school district’s state aid allocation an amount to help the state bridge the gap in its revenue shortfall. It did the job, but balancing the state budget by diverting funding from public schools has resulted in $8.5 billion less statewide in state aid since that time, according to the New York State School Boards Association (NYSSBA).

School district officials in Ulster County, speaking at a recent education forum in New Paltz, said the loss countywide from the GEA is $116 million. Saugerties Superintendent Seth Turner said the tally here is $13.4 million.

Now that Albany has traded its deficit for a surplus, public school officials and advocates statewide (and parents like those in PACE Saugerties) are calling for an end to the GEA.

Equally distressing to the Saugerties group is the way in which Governor Cuomo is tying school funding to his reforms. He has advised lawmakers that he’s willing to approve as much as a 4.8 percent increase in school aid, but only if his education reforms are approved. If they are not, the increase in state aid to schools will be no more than 1.7 percent. Negotiations between the governor and Legislature will produce an exact amount. The final state budget is due April 1.

The governor’s reforms include a teacher evaluation system that will base as much as 50 percent of a teacher’s ratings on student test scores, making it harder for teachers to get tenure and easier for them to be fired. And those “high stakes tests” have become a rallying point for parents who believe the tests are detrimental to their child’s overall education in sacrificing a well rounded education in favor of concentrating on test prep.

“What can we do to make our voices heard?” asks Mangione. “How can we prove that we, as parents, are upset about reforms? We refuse the tests, that’s what we do. We refuse the tests that are an unfair assessment of our children’s education.”

The high stakes tests are “setting our children up to fail,” she says, adding that the questions on her third grader’s test are written for a seventh or eighth grade level reader. “And we don’t want corporations to take over our schools. We are protecting our public schools. My sixth and third grader will not be taking the tests. I’m going to refuse these tests again and again and again until I’m certain our schools are safe from corporate takeover.”

John Street Jam’s swan song

$
0
0

John-Street-Jam-HZT

Steve and Terri Massardo

Steve and Terri Massardo

After more than a decade of live music – 162 shows featuring 450 musicians – the John St. Jam in Saugerties is coming to an end. The last Jam will be on Saturday, April 11 from 7:30 to 10 p.m. in its usual home at the Dutch Arms Chapel on John St. The final event will feature Jam founders and organizers Steve and Terri Massardo along with Big Joe Fitz, Terry Seeley, Marji Zintz, Mike Baglione, Kimberly, Fran Palmieri and Paul Luke Andreassen.

“It’s taken us over a year to come to this decision,” says Terri Massardo. “We agonized over leaving our audience, leaving a financial hole at the church and leaving the musicians one less good listening room to share their voices. We’ve reached a point in our lives, though, when family and other considerations are becoming more important to us.”

The John St. Jam has been a labor of love for the Massardos. And there’s a lot of labor involved; Steve booked the musicians and coordinated the events and Terri prepared dinner at their home for the musicians before each Jam. At the events, after setting up the room, Terri worked the door and Steve worked the soundboard and served as master of ceremonies. Afterward, they did all the clean-up with the help of volunteers.

Terri says they haven’t asked anyone else to continue holding the Jam, but a few people have expressed interest. She said the couple would welcome anyone to adopt the format and would even lend a hand.

But maybe not just yet. At this point, the Massardos are looking forward to some vacation time and spending more time with their nine grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Dedicating more time to their own music is also in their plans.

 

Looking back

For the first two months it existed — the first Jam was held Jan. 31, 2004 — the Jam was an open mic. But in an effort to attract a wider-ranging audience and ensure a high level of musicianship, the Massardos began setting it all up in advance and inviting musicians to play on the second Saturday of each month; the fifth Saturday, too, in months that had one.

As the Jam grew in popularity over the years, the format for each evening was established. In an intimate “living room” setting lit by softly glowing lamps, four musicians arranged in a circle performed acoustic music for an audience seated on folding chairs just feet away. The performers’ musical styles ranged from folk music to blues and everything in between.

Over time the event came to be about community camaraderie as much as it was about music. And those who experienced a John St. Jam often came back again and again. Maureen and Don Black live in Wappingers Falls, an hour-and-15-minute drive from Saugerties, yet they’ve hardly missed a show since they discovered the Jam in its second year. “Put it this way,” Maureen says. “I’ve had two hip replacement operations, and we scheduled them so that I would not miss a John St. Jam. My husband actually broke me out of rehab in a wheelchair and drove me to Saugerties so we could attend the Jam.”

Maureen credits Steve and Terri for creating the welcoming ambiance at the events. “Love and laughter; I think that’s their secret. They really make everyone feel like they’re the most special person on the planet.”

And the performances drew them back. “It’s a listening room,” says Maureen, “so everyone is paying careful attention to the performers in the middle, and they feed off each other, which is wonderful. The circle of four performers, in two different sets, and they do a round robin; one person will start and then the next person might change what they were going to play because the first song played reminded them of something. Or they may invite the other performers to sing harmonies or do instrumentals with them. There have been some nights when it turned into a ‘magic’ Jam; these people had never met before but they’re so talented they could just jump in on each other’s song and do wonderful, wonderful things.”

The Massardos were first inspired to create the John St. Jam after taking a trip to Nashville in 2003. Terri and Steve are both musicians, and Terri had been thinking of ways to help raise funds for the Saugerties Reformed Church in which she’s long been active. “She had decided to do something musical to raise money, and a regular event would be better than a single concert,” Steve said in a 2013 interview with Saugerties Times. “We’d been kind of racking our brains about how to make it distinctive when Terri saw a show in-the-round at The Bluebird Cafe [the Nashville club known for its intimate acoustic music performed by its composers]. That was really the spark; it was less than a month later when we got back that we did the first Jam. We went from performing in local bars and coffee houses to sort of creating one out of thin air.”

 

A void in the music scene

The John St. Jam meant a lot to the musicians who participated, too. In the 2013 interview, Steve Massardo explained that the musicians appreciated the level of attentiveness from the audience at a Jam. “The people are really engaged in everybody’s performance. It’s not like playing at a bar, where you’re competing with the baseball game on TV or billiards; which is not only distracting as a performer, but disheartening. They come here and they have 100 or so people who are just fascinated by what they do. And a musician wants to be heard; they’re putting their heart and soul into writing these songs.”

When Paul Luke Andreassen performs at the last Jam, it will close a full circle in a sense, because he was one of the performers at the very first Jam. Andreassen credits the Massardos dedication to the singers and songwriters of the region as creating an “Austin City Limits of the North country” in the John St. Jam. “I was proud as a performer as well as a spectator to participate through the years,” he says. “I have seldom witnessed as genuine a respect for singers and writers as I’ve witnessed by Steve, Terri and their merry band of volunteers who are always there at the shows to help. All I can say is, ‘They’re a tough act to follow.’ A void in the music scene will be evident for years to come.”

Proceeds from the $5 admission fee and sales of refreshments have always gone entirely to benefit the church.

The last show will be special, says Terri Massardo, not only as the last show but because the couple will share the stage with some of their closest friends. “One of our songs was written by a dear friend, Beth Ashton, who has since died of cancer. Her husband, Steve Ashton (now remarried) will join us on upright bass.” The Massardos also plan to perform one of the first songs they learned when they first got together.

Terri says it’s hard to even think about the preparation for the last show without tears. “We began this journey thinking it would last a few years, then lose favor and eventually end. Instead it has done just the opposite; we’ve continued to grow and are blown away at times by the performances. We are often amazed at the talent that comes to us, and from great distances: Switzerland and Sweden, I think, top the list! A lot of musicians have met at the John St. Jam and continue to get together musically and socially; there are even several couples we know of that met at the Jam and one in particular that eventually married. It has been our musical child and we have felt very protective of it. But now we’re ready to let it go, enjoy the memories and hope that friendships formed there will last forever.”

More info is available at http://www.johnstreetjam.net.

Cuba before the Americans

$
0
0
(Photo courtesy Michael Nelson)

(Photo courtesy Michael Nelson)

When Saugerties-based photographer Michael Nelson visited Cuba for two weeks this past March, his first impression of the island was of its sheer size. “Cuba was always ‘the forbidden place’ that Americans were not allowed to visit for 50 years, so we kind of erased the island from our imaginations because we could never go there,” he says. “And then when you get there, you realize, ‘This is a big, big island!’ It’s 800 miles wide; the distance from New York City to Indianapolis. And if Havana were a city in the U.S., it would be the fourth largest city in the country. It’s the size of Chicago. You look around and you feel like, ‘Where have I been? This place has been going on.’”

And then there’s what Nelson refers to as the “pulsation of the people.” Cuba’s social culture is vibrant, he says. “The people are all very friendly; they come up to you. No one is on an iPhone or iPad, and everyone talks to each other. When you meet people, they ask you where you’re from. Most of the tourists are from Canada, Germany or South America, so when I said ‘New York,’ they were blown away. Their reaction was like, ‘Wow… so this is really happening now.’ I guess I was one of the first non-Cuban Americans they’d run into, but by next March I’m sure it’ll be the opposite; it’ll be like, ‘Oh no, another New Yorker.’ But I felt very special. And being fanatic baseball fans in Cuba, they all wanted to talk about ‘El Duque,’ [former Yankees and Mets pitcher Orlando Hernández]. That was their connection to New York.”

Nelson is primarily a commercial photographer. He shoots a lot of video and has done extensive aerial drone photography. But going down to Cuba came from a different motivation, he says. “I wanted to see what it looked like before the Americans came. To see everything through my camera, to capture it and archive it somehow. And I wanted to do it as a person on the streets, just walking, as a street photographer like Henri Cartier-Bresson, in that sense of just… what do you see on the streets? You know Cuba is going to change, so I wanted to photograph as much as I could to show what it looked like now.”

He brought a camera small enough to fit in his pocket. “I didn’t want to bring professional looking equipment, because my friend’s son went to Cuba with a film crew and had to pay $3,000 and fill out a lot of paperwork. And there was a guard with them the whole time. I didn’t want to stand out, so I brought a Lumix. It’s a new generation camera, very small, and has a Leica lens; it’s great. It’s very close to my professional 35mm cameras.” The strategy worked, as Nelson was able to go in and out of places and blend in.

On one occasion Nelson photographed the “women in white” who protest every Sunday in Miramar for the release of their husbands in prison for speaking out against the government. The weeks before and after he was in Cuba, more than 50 of the women were arrested. As Nelson was shooting, he says, someone noted that there were four cameras trained on him and he began to question the wisdom of what he was doing. But caught up in the moment, he continued, then jumped in a cab — the only one he took the entire time he was there — and got out of there fast.

Cuba has very little public transportation available. Nelson says he walked everywhere; probably more than 100 miles altogether. People with cars drive 1950s and ‘60s automobiles, the last ones brought over by GM before Fidel Castro’s overthrow of Batista in 1959. (They’ve kept them running ever since.) Nelson says they do still have some of the Russian-made Ladas — a Honda Civic-type car, he explains — that were brought in by the Russians after the revolution, but they don’t seem to have held up like the old American cars did. “And you can hardly take a photograph without one of those cars being in it,” Nelson says.

Nelson took the trip alone. “You see groups of tourists, and the leader has a flag, and it’s like, ‘here come the tourists.’ But if you go alone, you are really in there,” he says. “You get to see it. In a way, it’s easier to go alone because everyone comes up to you. People talk to you, and they take you into places.”

He stayed in Cuban homes for $25 a night, at small government-sanctioned bed-and-breakfasts called “Casas Particulares.” Some 65 percent of the people in Cuba are government workers, Nelson says, making $18 a month, so while the $25 sounds pretty cheap to us, many Cubans are leaving white collar jobs to open these B&Bs (or drive cabs). A portion of the money does go to the government; how much, Nelson doesn’t know.

And were the people receptive to being photographed? “I always ask people for permission, except when it’s a crowd; you can’t ask permission there. But when I did ask them, a lot of them wanted a tip,” he says. “So I kept my pockets filled with pesos. That’s equal to about a dollar. But when you’re only making $18 a month, $1 to have a photograph taken is not bad. The thing is, they don’t see themselves on Facebook, they don’t see themselves on the Internet, so they don’t know what the end product of what you’re doing is going to be.”

The food was “nothing to write home about,” Nelson says, “but then again, maybe I just didn’t find the right places.” Breakfast was always good, he adds, and so were the rice-and-beans. But the Cubano sandwich he had at the Cuban National Hotel was “very bland,” unlike the one made right here in Saugerties at Deli-Cioso, whose proprietor is Puerto Rican and has a Cuban wife. “His Cubano sandwich is incredible!” raves Nelson.

Deli-Cioso will be hanging a selection of Nelson’s photographs from Cuba on the walls of the cafe, as will the Bluestone Coffee Roasting Company, where Nelson has been exhibiting his work for the past year. He likes the idea of putting his work in cafes, he says, in keeping with the spirit of late 19th century Parisian cafes that used to show art that way. There was recently a one-day pop-up show of the Cuban photographs at the Kiersted House, and Nelson is planning future exhibitions elsewhere. The photographs can be seen in this month’s Hudson Valley Magazine, as well.

Nelson’s visit was the result of his longstanding fascination with Cuba. He was born in Key West, and says he remembers, as a child, seeing the sign at the pier pointing toward Havana, reading, ‘Cuba: 90 miles.’ “You don’t really see anything at that point,” he says. “You just imagine where it is.” His father was a navigator in the Navy and stationed on an aircraft carrier off the coast of Cuba during the Cuban Missile Crisis. And Nelson heard a lot of intriguing stories about Cuba over the years from his longtime friend, who is Cuban, whose family left the island in 1959 when Fidel Castro seized power.

Nelson had tried to visit Cuba last year, but even though some of the restrictions against travel had been lifted by then, his application was turned down. There are now 12 categories of travel to Cuba permitted, including humanitarian activities and “journalistic activity,” but as of this writing, simple tourism travel is still prohibited. “You can’t go just to lie on the beach, in other words,” he says. His March visit has whet his appetite for more: he plans to return to the island soon; perhaps in January when there are supposed to be direct flights available from JFK airport. (On this trip he had to fly through the Cayman Islands first.)

“The experience in Cuba kind of reminded me of the experience of being in New York City on the Lower East Side in the ‘70s,” Nelson says. “Everything was kind of falling apart in New York then, but people talked to each other — not always in a nice way, of course! — and it was authentic. New York City now is so corporate… it’s like a mall. And that’s the fear with Cuba, that American corporations will go in there and do the same thing. Right now the environment in Cuba is clean… there’s no industry, so there’s no pollution. Their coral reefs are pristine and there are no gas or oil spills; they have one of the best bird-watching areas there. And we all talk about sustainability here, but look at Cuba: they don’t throw anything away! They have to fix it.”

Nelson remembers being in New York City in 1973 and photographing the subways. “I didn’t think much about it then — it was just what it was — but when I look at the photographs now, there are people with afros, there are bag ladies… I say, ‘that’s history!’ You know, we think of ourselves as being journalists and photojournalists here and now, but actually, 30 years from now, we’ll have been historians.”

Saugerties pastor honored by State Legislature’s pro-choice caucus

$
0
0
Finley Schaef in Albany

Finley Schaef in Albany

A large part of freedom for women is their ability to decide if and when to be a mother,” says Rev. Finley Schaef. “Motherhood should not be an accident or something imposed upon women.”

Schaef was honored on the floor of the State Assembly on Tuesday, June 2 by members of the New York State Bipartisan Pro-Choice Legislative Caucus, who recognized Schaef’s groundbreaking work in establishing the Clergy Consultation Service on Abortion in 1966, a nationwide network of clergy who referred women to physicians who would provide safe abortions years before the Supreme Court legalized the procedure on a national scale in 1973. (New York State legalized abortion in 1970, three years prior to the Roe v. Wade decision.)

The tribute was initiated by the Albany-based Concerned Clergy for Choice, a multi-faith organization of family planning advocates. Assembly members James Brennan of Brooklyn and Ellen Jaffee of Pearl River both spoke to pay homage to Schaef.

The Clergy Consultation Service on Abortion convened by Rev. Schaef in 1966 is estimated to have helped more than 100,000 women obtain a safe abortion. “And there were no fatalities to the women,” says Schaef. “Not one. It was quite a remarkable venture. It eventually spread all across the country with more than 1,400 clergy joining up.”

And it all started with one very specific situation, he says.

Rev. Schaef, now a Saugerties resident and retired at age 85, was pastor at Washington Square Methodist Church in New York City in 1966. “A woman came to me whose teenage daughter had been raped and she was pregnant,” he says. “She asked me if I could help her find an abortionist and I couldn’t. I couldn’t help her, because I didn’t know of any. But about six months later, I ran into another minister in the neighborhood who was older and very experienced in organizing.”

That minister was Rev. Howard Moody, the Baptist pastor at Judson Memorial Church in Greenwich Village. “I suggested to him that we start a clergy group that would refer women to physicians for safe abortions,” says Schaef. “So he called some people together and we met at my church two or three times. We had myself and Rev. Moody and another clergy member, and two very experienced high-powered attorneys along with abortion activist Larry Lader. Ephraim London was one of the attorneys; he argued dozens of cases before the Supreme Court and got Lenny Bruce’s conviction overturned.”

The plan came together at the early organizational meetings. “We hashed out the details — it was controversial whether we wanted to include the word ‘abortion’ in the title, but we decided to do that — and then Howard, who was much more of an organizer than I was at the time, moved the whole operation to his church and it took off. The New York Times reported it when we were really ready to go forward.”

On May 22, 1967, The New York Times carried a front page announcement of the consultation service, including the names of Rev. Schaef and other clergy involved and their offer to refer women for safe and affordable abortions.

But despite the fact that abortion was illegal in the mid-’60s, they weren’t really worried about legal repercussions. “Well, we had to be very careful,” Schaef says. “We had to make sure our phone lines weren’t tapped. We were called before the grand jury in the Bronx by the district attorney, but nothing came of it. And that’s the only instance of any intervention by legal authorities; just that one time in the Bronx. It was kind of amazing.”

Receiving honors in the State Assembly last month was gratifying, Schaef says. “I had no inkling at all that anybody would ever do anything like this. Because it was my idea, you see, and Rev. Moody and I got the thing going, but I only conceived of it because of the experience I had with this distressed mother and her daughter. It distressed me that I couldn’t help her, but she turned out to be the power behind the idea, because if it weren’t for her, I would never have done it.” And when it came down to it, he says, “It was as easy as calling the right people together.”

The consultation service worked quite simply. “If a woman called, she was referred to one of the clergy members who was on duty, so to speak. I would do it for maybe a month and then I would be taken off the active list for a month or two, then I would be put back on and they would refer women to me again. There were a number of clergy involved, so we had enough to do that.” A woman would go to the referred clergy member’s office and receive the contact information for a physician who was willing to perform an abortion. “Someone who was legitimate and not a back alley kind of thing,” adds Schaef. “Someone that we could trust.”

Schaef retired from active ministry in 1997 after 40 years and moved up to Saugerties to be closer to family members in the area. He and his wife Nancy are active in Democratic politics, both members of the Saugerties Democratic Committee of which Nancy is vice-chair.

Schaef was also an activist in a broad spectrum of social protest movements, notably anti-Vietnam War and civil rights. He provided sanctuary to Vietnam War draft resisters at his church and he marched from Selma, Alabama to Montgomery with Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. “I went down there with a couple of other clergy,” he says today. “I was in Queens at the time. It was a natural thing for me to do, because I was serving a church in St. Albans that was largely a black constituency and I was engaged in a lot of civil rights activities already.”

So is there any single memory that stands out from that march into Montgomery half a century ago? “The march was memorable,” Schaef says, “but what I remember most is hearing one of the preachers saying before the march, ‘People say we’re agitators. Well, you know in a washing machine, the agitator is the part that gets the dirt out of the clothes. And that’s what we’re doing here; we’re getting the dirt out of the system.’”

Taxes flat in proposed library budget

$
0
0
(Photo by Will Dendis)

(Photo by Will Dendis)

Despite a small increase in the Saugerties tax rate (from 29.78 to 29.98 cents per $1,000 of assessed value), voters on Sept. 3 will not see an increase in the amount of taxes they’re asked to contribute to the 2016 Saugerties Public Library budget. In fact, the library is asking for exactly the same amount in taxpayer support that it has for each of the previous three years: $521,964. For a homeowner with a residence appraised at $250,000, that works out to approximately $75 per year.

The tax rate is increasing because the total assessed value of Saugerties real estate went down.

The proposed $586,507 budget exceeds the current operating budget by $6,710. The library will make up the difference by applying $34,043 from its fund reserve; $9,312 more than it applied from the fund balance last year to balance the books.

But the library still has a healthy remaining fund balance of $441,234, with a board-approved spending plan that will allow for replacing items like computers and carpeting as well as facilities upkeep and technology.

“We have a bit of a surplus that we’ve built up,” said Library Director Frank Rees.

The fund balance was also used recently, he said, to acquire properties on Division St. in order to provide 8,000 square feet of outdoor programming space and 13 new parking spaces to better serve the community.

The Saugerties Public Library Board of Trustees will hold a public hearing on the proposed 2016 budget at the regularly scheduled meeting on Tuesday, Aug. 11 at 6 p.m. at the library, 91 Washington Ave. The budget vote and election of three trustees will be held at the library on Thursday, Sept. 3 from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. All registered voters living in the Saugerties Public Library District — renters, too, not just property owners — are eligible to vote. Absentee ballots will be available after Aug. 18.

 

Expenses

Salary expenses for 2016 are budgeted to increase by two percent, from $275,430 to $280,939. The cost of benefits for those employees, however, will be lowered by nine percent, from $90,239 in 2015 to $82,313. The reason for that, said Rees, is a reduction in what the library has to pay in New York State retirement contributions due to fewer full-time staff members. The Saugerties Library currently has four full-time employees — three of them with master’s degrees in library science — and 12 part-time employees.

The cost of the budget vote and elections remains at $775.

Books, CDs, DVDs, e-books; a flat $65,000.

Programming costs, along with those for art and exhibits at the library, are budgeted to increase from $10,775 to $12,700, nearly 20 percent. “We have a substantial collection of in-house art,” Rees said. “Most of the increase is going toward getting an assessment of those materials and producing a self-guided tour brochure with pictures and provenance of all the paintings.”

Building operation costs for utilities, insurance, maintenance, lawn and grounds, snow removal, geothermal, equipment and custodial services are up $4,220 over last year’s figures, from $88,550 to $92,770.

And the mandatory fees to the Mid-Hudson Library System are going up 12 percent, from $14,978 this year to $16,798 in 2016. “It’s based on population and circulation,” said Rees. “Mostly on circulation; they take a look at the past three years of circulation and make an assessment for member libraries based on that. But if you boil it down, that’s probably the most important piece of the budget, because that funds the delivery system so you can order a book from any library in the system.”

Professional services (accounting, legal, IT consulting and staff development) are budgeted basically the same as in 2015, at just $122 more.

 

Steady usage

The number of active card-carrying patrons at the Saugerties Public Library is 9,671, some 49.5 percent of all Saugertiesians. New library cards are issued at an average of 40 per month. There have been 51,841 people through the library doors so far this year, consistent with last year’s total of 97,346 people by year’s end. Visits to the website are on par with last year, as well, with 25,226 visits so far in 2015.

When it comes to programs, more than 11,800 individuals attended 846 library programs in 2014, and this year looks to continue that trend with more than 6,710 attending 391 library programs so far in 2015. “I feel fortunate as the director here,” said Rees, “because we have tremendous community support in everything that we try to do.”

Computer usage also remains strong, with 21,129 people logging in to the library’s computers in 2014 and more than 10,000 so far in 2015.

More information is available at the library, where copies of the proposed budget may be obtained, or on http://www.saugertiespubliclibrary.org, where a budget summary is posted. Concerns may be raised at the public hearing on Tuesday, Aug. 11 at 6 p.m. or residents may contact Library Director Frank Rees at 246-4317.

Just one candidate for three open Saugerties Library Board seats

$
0
0
(Photo by Will Dendis)

(Photo by Will Dendis)

Ken Goldberg

Ken Goldberg

After the Saugerties Public Library renovated its original Carnegie Library building and expanded in 2011, there was an upsurge of interest in joining the Board of Trustees. Seven candidates ran for three available seats in 2012, and six candidates ran for just two positions in 2013. Interest in joining the board these days has waned, however, with the number of candidates running in 2014 equal to the number of seats. This year — with the library celebrating its 100th anniversary on Sept. 14 — there is only one candidate, incumbent Ken Goldberg, on the Sept. 3 ballot for three open seats.

Trustee Mary Leahy has reached her term limit after ten years on the board and cannot run again, and trustee Rebecca Mignano-Campbell has chosen not to run again.

The ballot will offer the opportunity for write-in votes to fill the seats.

The Saugerties Public Library Board of Trustees currently has 12 members on its roster: Elizabeth Hernandez, Kenneth Goldberg, Irene Hurst, Cynthia Saporito, Vernon Benjamin, Rebecca Mignano-Campbell, Bernard Carroll, Brian Collins, Ted Conathan, Kenneth Goldberg, Mary Leahy and Myrna Sameth.

The board meets once a month, and each member belongs to several committees devoted to specific efforts. Trustees assist in determining the priorities for the library and work in consultation with the library’s director on policy and personnel decisions, management of fundraising efforts and budget development.

If there are no write-in votes, the board has two options, says Goldberg, current board vice-president and former treasurer. “The board could fill those two seats by appointment for one year, until the next election takes place, and then those seats — in addition to those of anyone whose term is ending — would all be on the ballot. Or the board could decide to leave one or both of the seats vacant until the next election cycle.”

A trustee term normally runs for five years with a two-term limit.

When deciding to run again for his seat on the board, Goldberg says it came down to several things. “First I want to make sure that the services and the programs that we’re offering continue to be offered as well as possible to library patrons. That means all the activities that take place along with everything that is made available to anybody that has a Saugerties Library card: books, e-books, e-readers, DVDs, audio. And I would like to continue to improve the offerings with new things that we discover or that patrons would like to have available.”

Another factor in Goldberg’s decision was his desire to help keep taxes level as long as possible. “Because I pay my taxes, as well, as everybody on the board does. We have been able to keep a balanced budget with no increase [for taxpayers] for the past three years and I would like to continue to keep it as low as possible. That’s been a high priority for me, and we’ve been successful so far.”

Overall, Goldberg says, “I think we have to continue to do really well with the things that we’re doing. We have to be very open and aware of new things that other libraries are starting to do that we can do to provide even more and better service, and I want to keep a good eye on the financial side.”

Goldberg is a retired faculty member of New York University, where he was chair of the mathematics department. He’s lived in Saugerties since 1979 with his wife, who is a native of the town.

The ballot will also ask voters to approve a proposed 2016 operating budget of $586,507 that allows for a contribution of $521,964 in taxpayer support with a tax rate of $0.2998 per $1,000 assessed value. For a homeowner with a residence appraised at $250,000, that works out to approximately $75 per year.

All registered voters living in the Saugerties Public Library District are eligible to vote on Thursday, Sept. 3 from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Absentee ballots will be available after Aug. 18. More information is available on the library website at http://www.saugertiespubliclibrary.org or by calling (845) 246-4317.


The first British invasion: Historian discusses New Netherland takeover

$
0
0
A time traveler? (photo by Will Dendis)

A time traveler? (photo by Will Dendis)

The 1664 British takeover of the Dutch colony of New Netherland — which afterward became New York — was one of the most important events in our state history. So says Ulster County Historian Anne Gordon, who feels so strongly about the significance of that event that she petitioned the state government two years ago to officially recognize the 350th anniversary of the occasion. “We certainly celebrated the 150th anniversary of the Civil War, but the state decided it didn’t need to commemorate this,” she says. “But the British takeover of New Netherland had just as much impact on the people who lived here at the time as the Civil War [did two centuries later].”

And that official disregard of such an important historical event rankled Gordon, who says she took it upon herself to do the research and go out to speak on the topic to let people know just how momentous were the changes wrought in 1664.

Gordon will give an informal talk on the subject at the Saugerties Public Library on Saturday, Jan. 9 at 2 p.m. as the guest speaker for the Friends of Historic Saugerties organization that meets once a month to discuss local history. (Usually on the first Saturday of each month, except when a holiday falls on or near that date, as in this case.) All are welcome to attend. Admission is free. There will be time after the talk for discussion and questions.

The Dutch only controlled the Hudson River Valley for some 55 years — from 1609 when English sailor Henry Hudson claimed the region for his Dutch employers until 1664 when the British took over — but in that short time they established New Netherland, with trading posts, towns and forts up and down the Hudson River that laid the groundwork for our times. What the Dutch knew as Fort Orange is now Albany, New York City’s original name was New Amsterdam and the New Netherland’s third major settlement, Wiltwyck, is now Kingston.

The colony of New Netherland did well, with 9,000 residents living up and down the river by 1664. It was a profitable venture for the Dutch, but as is always the case, those who produce wealth attract attention. The Dutch lost New Netherland to the British during the Second Anglo-Dutch War in 1664 just a few years after the establishment of Wiltwyck. King Charles of England granted his brother, James, Duke of York, vast American territories that included all of New Netherland. James raised a small fleet and sent it to New Amsterdam, who were without any forces to defend themselves, and by September of 1664, New York was born. That ended the direct involvement of the Dutch in North America, although the influences of their architecture and culture live on.

Attendees at the Friends of Historic Saugerties meeting on Jan. 9 will hear from Anne Gordon about how the British allowed the people of New Netherland to keep their language and religion, but their schools were closed and printing presses shut down. And while slavery was in effect under Dutch rule, it was not quite as oppressive as it later became under the British. “The British king was a major stockholder in the slave importing company, so they just began to fill the labor market with slaves,” Gordon says. “And they began to enforce very stringent laws against the slaves. They weren’t allowed to gather in groups larger than three, and they couldn’t own anything or earn money, which they had previously been allowed to do under the Dutch. Before the British takeover a slave could earn money and buy his freedom, and the Dutch freed slaves that fought on their side during various wars they were having.”

Women didn’t fare very well under the British, either. While Dutch rule had treated them almost as equal to men, with the right to inherit and own property and businesses, all of that ended with English dominion.

In the area of New Netherland that later became Saugerties, Barent Cornelis Volge — the “Little Sawyer” whose nickname gave the town its name — was operating a sawmill on the Sawyer’s Kill at the time of the British takeover. Early documents show that he’d secured a title to the land from the Esopus Sachem by 1663, the year prior. But it’s worth noting, in visualizing what this area was like at the time, how comparatively few people were actually living here then, says Gordon, even in Wiltwyck (Kingston), where the main seat of government was. “There were maybe 100 families living there at the time and not too many more out in the countryside,” she says.

Anne M. Gordon has served as Ulster County Historian for seven years and is a New York State Registered Public Historian. Prior to her appointment to the position by county Executive Michael Hein, Gordon was a town historian for the Town of Esopus. Each town in the county is required by law to have an official town historian, she says, with Saugerties unusual in having both a village and town historian. Gordon says her position as county historian means her main job is to act as “a reference point, to steer people toward the place where they can get the answers to their questions.” If someone contacts her for information about Saugerties, she’ll refer them to either Village of Saugerties Historian Marge Block or Town of Saugerties Historian Audrey Klinkenberg (who, incidentally, is also deputy county historian).

The Friends of Historic Saugerties group is approaching their first anniversary, having organized last year for their inaugural meeting in February of 2015. “I’m very impressed with the work they’ve been doing,” says Gordon. “They’re extremely well organized. I think it’s a model for other towns to look at, rather than leaving it all to one person, to have a committee who is interested in town history and organizes events that help educate people in the town about their history.”

More information about the Friends of Historic Saugerties is available on Facebook at “I Like Saugerties.” Anne Gordon can be reached at (845) 419-5137 or pasaran@msn.com. The county website with contact information for individual town historians is www.ulstercountyny.gov/ulster-county-historian.

A chat with Father Chris Berean

$
0
0
  (A version of this story appeared in the Nov. 28, 2012 issue of Saugerties Times. Apologies if anything is out of date!) Father Chris Berean of St. Mary of the Snow and St. Joseph’s Roman Catholic churches in Saugerties has been a priest for over 25 years. Father Chris (“the kids at St. Mary’s don’t even think I have a last name,” he jokes) became a priest at age 26, starting out at St. John’s Church in Woodstock before coming to St. Mary’s, first as an assistant and then as pastor these past six years, with a three-year stretch in the middle as pastor of St. Francis de Sales in Phoenicia. Berean was born in Brooklyn, but within a few years his family had moved to the town of New Windsor in Orange County. “I’ve really been a small-town boy my whole life,” he says, adding that part of the appeal of living in Saugerties for him is that it reminds him so much of what his home in New Windsor was like when he was growing up. “Of course, now, it’s very different there – it’s more like Long Island, with strip malls and built-up neighborhoods – but […]

Holiday Unison Art, Craft and Design Fair gets a new name, new location and new date

$
0
0
The 26th annual holiday art and craft fair produced by Unison Arts Center will be held at a new venue this year. It will take place at SUNY New Paltz in the Student Union Multipurpose Room on November 26 and 27 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Pictured are some of the artists who will be selling their wares. Top row left to right: Helene Bigley with ceramics, Bob Collins with leather bags, Joe Reilly with paper and paintings, Elissa Cimino with holiday greens and floral design and Alexa Ginsburg with fiber and felt. Bottom row left to right: Stuart Bigley with paintings and photography, Mary Ann Williams with baskets and Paul Hartmann with guitars. (photo by Lauren Thomas)

The 26th annual holiday art and craft fair produced by Unison Arts Center will be held at a new venue this year. It will take place at SUNY New Paltz in the Student Union Multipurpose Room on November 26 and 27 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Pictured are some of the artists who will be selling their wares. Top row left to right: Helene Bigley with ceramics, Bob Collins with leather bags, Joe Reilly with paper and paintings, Elissa Cimino with holiday greens and floral design and Alexa Ginsburg with fiber and felt. Bottom row left to right: Stuart Bigley with paintings and photography, Mary Ann Williams with baskets and Paul Hartmann with guitars. (photo by Lauren Thomas)

The 26th annual holiday art and craft fair produced by Unison Arts Center is getting a new name, a new date and a new location this year. The Unison Art, Craft and Design Fair will be held a little earlier in the season than usual, over Thanksgiving Day weekend: Saturday and Sunday, November 26 and 27 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day. The new location is on the SUNY New Paltz campus, inside the glass atrium Student Union Building off Route 32 South at 1 Hawk Drive.

Admission costs $4 for adults and $3 for adult members of Unison. Entrance is free for SUNY students and people under age 13. Ample free parking is available, and with the college closed for the holiday weekend, there won’t be much competition for parking spots.

The annual Unison fair is known by its loyal repeat visitors as an upscale representation of local artisanship and artistry. Fine artists exhibit their photographic, sculptural and painted works alongside artisans who create decorative and functional pieces in ceramics, fiber arts, woodwork — including a guitar maker this year — leather, basketry, fused glass and metals. Jewelers who create one-of-a-kind pieces in silver, cloisonné, mixed metals or unique beads are well-represented, as are craftspeople who offer green products: holiday wreaths, natural soaps and beauty products, hand-spun yarns and heirloom seeds from the newly renamed Hudson Valley Seed Company (formerly the Hudson Valley Seed Library).

The list of nearly 50 participating artists can be found on the event Facebook page. An effort is always made to include both returning favorites and new people in the mix, says Stuart Bigley, founder of Unison. And while the emphasis has always been on the presentation of high-end work, he adds, “We do ask all the vendors to have more affordable work for sale, too, so there is something for pretty much anybody.”

Shifting the event from its former location at New Paltz Middle School came about because of capital project construction in the district. The new set-up in the glass atrium on the college campus will provide almost as much space for vendors, however, according to Bigley. The parking situation should be easier with all of the lots available, and the airy space in the atrium, lit by natural light, will complement the works on view.

Visitors may wish to note there won’t be any pre-made food available, as at past events, because of campus policies regarding food service.

The new date for the event happens to fall on the weekend that includes “Small Business Saturday,” the now-nationwide response to mall shoppers’ Black Friday and online buyers’ Cyber Monday. Shoppers are encouraged to buy local over the Thanksgiving Day weekend and support small businesses in one’s hometown, putting those dollars back to work in the community. All the vendors at the Unison event are local, and each represents a small cottage industry.

The Unison Art, Craft and Design Fair is sponsored by Bailey Ceramic Supply, Rhinebeck Artist Shops, My Market and Looking Good Naturally. Their donations help offset the cost of putting on the event, Bigley says, which serves as a major fundraiser each year for the Unison Arts Center at 68 Mountain Rest Road.

Now in its 40th year, Unison has been in transition for the last few years. The major challenges have been finding a board of trustees available to oversee operations for the nonprofit, and keeping funding coming in so they can continue to offer programs and events. The current board is moving on to other things at the end of this year, so plans to establish a new board with several prospective members is in the works. Stuart and Helene Bigley will join that new board, returning to an active management role at Unison.

One of the possibilities they’re considering for future fundraising is to rent out the facilities for events. “Renting the space is not going to be our primary purpose,” says Stuart, “but it can be a means to an end. It’s not a change in what Unison will be, but it will help keep everything together.” With that in mind, he adds, there will be some sprucing up of the building and property so that when the spring season begins, “it will be a more inviting space for people to come to.”

Other fundraising activities may include additional art and craft fairs throughout the year and perhaps a plein air paint-out or large gallery exhibition. More information is available by visiting Unison Arts Center on Facebook or visit unisonarts.org.

Highland School Board president questions capital project’s progress

$
0
0
(Photo by Lauren Thomas)

(Photo by Lauren Thomas)

The Highland Central School District’s regular meeting on Tuesday, November 15 featured an update on the capital project from architect Pat Flynn of Ashley McGraw Architects and Lou Rodriguez with the Palombo Group responsible for construction.

Rodriguez said they were happy with the progress made so far in phase 1-A of the $17.5 million capital improvements project, but Highland School Board president Alan Barone questioned why the project isn’t moving along more quickly, noting that it seemed to have started off well but was currently not at the point of progress they’d expected. With work on the elementary and high school windows and insulation behind schedule, he is particularly worried about maintaining the heat in the buildings in January and February and wondered why second shift work that had been agreed upon has not been introduced. “It’s discouraging at this point,” he said.

Barone also noted that they were informed that phase 1-A went “a little over $1 million over budget,” and yet the board has not received a detailed accounting of finances so far. “The community is looking to us as a board to put this project together, and accomplish everything we set out to accomplish. We as a board have to make decisions about how to move forward, and without that, I have no idea whatsoever where we are financially at this point. That should be cut-and-dry. We need to be involved in that.”

Moving forward, Barone said, the board needs to receive regular updates on costs.

Bids will go out for the next phase of construction once all approvals are received. The next phase of work will involve the secured access at point of entry at the schools and fire safety measures. The entrances to all three buildings will be provided with secure access requiring an ID badge with bar code to be read by devices at the entrances, and the bell and paging system will be updated. The home and careers classroom at the middle school will be updated, as will the air handling system at the middle school. In addition, the kitchens in the district will be renovated and modernized with new equipment. The last phase involving recoating the roof at the middle school will take place over the summer of 2018. The warranty goes through 2018, so no work will be done until that runs out.

State aid is paying for 66 percent of the $17.5 million project, or approximately $11 million, which reduced the local share to just under $6.5 million. Repayment will be made over 15 years. Taxpayers will not see any impact until 2018, by which time old debt from past projects will be paid off and replaced with this new debt.

More information is available by visiting the district website at www.highland-k12.org or the school’s Facebook page.

Twelfth-generation Huguenot descendant using Kickstarter campaign to fund children’s book, “Hugo the Huguenot”

$
0
0
Jennifer DuBois Bruntil has written a children's book titled, "Hugo the Huguenot."  She is descendant of the New Paltz Huguenot Dubois family and is pictured on the porch of the  DuBois Fort on Huguenot Street. (photo by Lauren Thomas)

Jennifer DuBois Bruntil has written a children’s book titled, “Hugo the Huguenot.” She is descendant of the New Paltz Huguenot Dubois family and is pictured on the porch of the DuBois Fort on Huguenot Street. (photo by Lauren Thomas)

What is Hugo’s story?
It’s quite a tale to tell,
I’ll tell you and you’ll not forget,
You shall remember well…
“Hugo the Huguenot,” by Jennifer DuBois Bruntil

 

As school programming coordinator for Historic Huguenot Street, it’s Jennifer DuBois Bruntil’s job to make Huguenot history accessible for kids that range in age from preschool up to high school. Older students can view the orientation video at the site’s visitor’s center, but the story of the Huguenots’ arrival in New Paltz after fleeing religious persecution is a difficult one for younger children to understand.

DuBois Bruntil, herself, is a 12th generation descendant of Louis DuBois, one of the original New Paltz Huguenot patentees. She remembers hearing the stories as a child from her grandmother, who, “could close her eyes and remember all the people in order.” But even with a family connection, the story of the Huguenots is a tough one to get kids to care about. So ever since she began working at Historic Huguenot Street last year, DuBois Bruntil has made a point of finding ways to make the story relatable to young children.

She first came up with a cartoon character she named “Hugo the Huguenot,” making him representative of all Huguenots. When she gave presentations to the kids, she showed them how Hugo got into a boat and sailed across to the New World. “They really got it then,” she says, and that made her think. Surprised that Historic Huguenot Street didn’t already have a kid-friendly children’s book to introduce them to the topic, she thought, ‘Maybe I’ll write one.’

After all, she’d always enjoyed playing with words and rhymes, and she already had the protagonist, Hugo. Home one night and playing around with the idea, she came up with a few stanzas. Later showing them to author A.J. Schenkman – town of Gardiner historian and consulting historian to Historic Huguenot Street – she asked him if he thought there was a children’s book in the rhymes she had come up with.

He was encouraging, and introduced her to a friend, illustrator Matthew Kelly, who had written and illustrated his own self-published children’s book called “Our Crayon Company.” Kelly had devised his tale to amuse his kids, incorporating details from his job working at R&F Handmade Paints in Kingston in creating a story of animals that ran a crayon factory. Kelly had funded the printing of his book through Kickstarter, which inspired DuBois Bruntil to go the same route.

The two are now collaborating on the project. Kelly’s illustrations are painterly; softly evocative watercolors that are interesting for adults to look at as well as kids. The Kickstarter campaign that the pair have put together will have just started as this edition of the newspaper goes to print (www.kickstarter.com/projects/652098140/hugo-the-Huguenot), with 30 days to raise the $4,000 it will take to print 250 hardcover books. As is the usual case with Kickstarter campaigns, donors will receive incentives based on their generosity. A donation of $25, for example, will reward the giver with a hardcover book once they’re printed. Other incentives include prints of the original artwork.

The plan is to print as many books as funds raised will allow, past the minimum goal of $4,000. Historic Huguenot Street is interested in carrying the book at their shop once it’s printed, and its writer and illustrator hope to see the book eventually sold in local bookstores. “I’d like to go to local libraries and read it during story hour, too, and get it to people that way,” says DuBois Bruntil. “But we can’t do that until we get the funds to print it.”

They’ll be using ColorPage Printing in Kingston to produce the books, with the idea that the entire book is local, from its history to its author and its illustrator to its printer.

“My goal is for children to walk away with a better understanding of the Huguenot story,” says DuBois Bruntil, who taught sixth grade for eight years in New Paltz before taking the position at Huguenot Street. She also plans to include a teaching page at the end of the book with vocabulary terms.

“Part of the reason I wrote it in rhyme is that rhyming words help kids learn to read. It’s dedicated to my own children, but also the children of New Paltz, and anybody that comes here. We hope adults will enjoy learning the history from it, too. Matt did his own research on how people looked and dressed, and we tried to make it as authentic as we could and respectful of everyone in it.”

New Paltz was not only much bigger then, DuBois Bruntil points out — spreading across 40,000 acres from the Hudson River to the Ridge, and from Wallkill to almost Kingston — but was a very multi-cultural society right from the start. “By the time the Huguenots came to New Paltz, they were looking to tie back into their French heritage. They took a lot from the culture of the Dutch, because they married into that, and they’ve lived in Germany. They got their patent from an English governor, because the English had taken over. So on the street, even once it’s been settled, there’s Dutch spoken, and French, English… so, very quickly, there’s a lot of things happening in this one area of New Paltz.”

Viewing all 437 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images