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X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://historicalsocietyofwoodstock.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for HIstorical Society of Woodstock
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240824
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20241007
DTSTAMP:20260526T164548
CREATED:20240306T193521Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241019T003356Z
UID:2011-1724457600-1728259199@historicalsocietyofwoodstock.org
SUMMARY:Exhibit: Woodstock Village: The Evolution
DESCRIPTION:A photo exploration of how the village of Woodstock  transformed from a small rural town to a  bustling creative community. The exhibit illustrates how buildings and businesses changed over the years. \nThe exhibit contains  photographs  from the  late 1800s to present\, from the Historical Society of Woodstock and private collections. Current  photos of Mill Hill Road\, Tinker Street and Rock City Road were taken by Henry Neimark and Fern Malkine-Falvey. Maps\, and paintings  by \nWoodstock artists\, John Pike\, Wilna Hervey\, Agnes Bierhals\, Jean White and others are presented to illustrate changes over time. \nSome buildings remain relatively unchanged\, others are gone\, and some transformed.   Woodstock has changed and evolved dramatically\, but the  business district has been the center of commercial\, social and cultural life in the village for over 200 years. \nIf buildings could talk\, what tales would they tell? \nSaturdays and Sundays\, 1 -5 pm \nHSW Eames Museum20 Comeau DriveWoodstock\, NY 12498 \nEvents\nSaturday\, August 24\, 4 PM. A Brief History of Woodstock: a talk by Richard Heppner\, Woodstock Town Historian. – see more info \nSaturday\, August 24\, 2 to 4 PM. History Harvest.  Bring a photo of a Woodstock village building or event.  It will be scanned on site  to be added to the HSW Woodstock Town Center Collection. \nSaturday\, September 21\, 4 PM\, Woodstock Architecture: a talk by Barry Price\, architect. \nSaturday\, September 21\,  2-4 PM. History Harvest. Bring a photo of a Woodstock village building or event.  It will be scanned on site to be added to the HSW Woodstock Town Center Collection. \nSaturday\, October 5\, 4PM. If Buildings Could Talk! An exhibition walk-through: with Curator JoAnn Margolis \n 
URL:https://historicalsocietyofwoodstock.org/event/exhibit-woodstock-village-the-evolution/
LOCATION:Historical Society of Woodstock\, 20 Comeau Drive\, Woodstock\, NY\, 12498\, United States
CATEGORIES:2024,Exhibit
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://historicalsocietyofwoodstock.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/Village-1.jpg
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240907T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240907T170000
DTSTAMP:20260526T164548
CREATED:20240306T192859Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240723T173904Z
UID:2009-1725721200-1725728400@historicalsocietyofwoodstock.org
SUMMARY:Author’s Talk: In Defiance – Runaways from Slavery in New York’s Hudson Valley
DESCRIPTION:by Susan Stessin-Cohn and Ashley Hurlburt-Biagini\nThe Historical Society of Woodstock Presents author Susan Stessin-Cohn for a talk on the second edition of her book\, In Defiance: Runaways from Slavery in New York’s Hudson River Valley 1735-1831 \nOn Saturday September 7 at 3:00 p.m.\, the Historical Society of Woodstock will present a talk by Susan Stessin-Cohn on her newest research and second edition of the publication\, In Defiance: Runaways from Slavery in New York’s Hudson River Valley 1735-1831.    \nIn recent years\, historians and researchers have taken a closer look at New York’s complicity in the “peculiar institution” of slavery. One of the books that helped shed more light on this tragic subject was the 2016 publication of In Defiance: Runaways from Slavery in New York’s Hudson River Valley\, 1735–1831. The core of that book by Hudson Valley historical researchers\, Susan Stessin-Cohn and Ashley Hurlburt-Biagini\, was the reproduction and transcriptions of hundreds of 18th and 19th-century newspapers notices offering rewards for the return of enslaved persons who had escaped their enslavers and become “runaways.” Continuing their research\, Stessin-Cohn and Hurlburt-Biagini discovered more than 250 additional runaway notices that prompted them to rewrite and greatly expand In Defiance in this newly released Second Edition. \nMost enslaved persons held in the Hudson River Valley lived and worked and died and left behind no historical record—no birth certificates\, no marriage records\, no death certificates\, unmarked graves. But In Defiance rescues over 900 of those individuals from obscurity because they decided to free themselves; when their enslavers placed notices in local and New York City newspapers offering rewards for their return\, they not only gave identity to some of the enslaved people\, but also unwittingly indicted themselves before the bar of historical judgment. Surnames synonymous with Hudson Valley history—names like Schuyler\, Van Rensselaer\, Beekman\, Rockefeller\, Van Cortlandt\, Van Buren\, Livingston—appear throughout the book as the authors of the notices advertising rewards for the return of their enslaved “property.” \nThe result of 17 years of research on behalf of Stessin-Cohn and Hurlburt-Biagini\, In Defiance examines life in bondage in our region and the natural “fight or flight” instinct in every human being dominating the minds of all those who were treated as property. \nThe Historical Society of Woodstock is located at 20 Comeau Drive. Admission to this talk is free. While in attendance\, visitors can also view HSW’s current exhibit: Woodstock Village – The Evolution as well as the Society’s permanent Tool Shed and Remembering Woodstock exhibits
URL:https://historicalsocietyofwoodstock.org/event/authors-talk-in-defiance-runaways-from-slavery-in-new-yorks-hudson-valley/
LOCATION:Historical Society of Woodstock\, 20 Comeau Drive\, Woodstock\, NY\, 12498\, United States
CATEGORIES:2024
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://historicalsocietyofwoodstock.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/In-Defiance-cover-for-fea.jpg
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