Showing posts with label Essex County. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Essex County. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Best Bets - Adirondack County Fairs Guide

Local fairs start this week, so here is a full list of Adirondack County Fairs, listed according to opening date. I've included a few of the most important regional fairs as well. Enjoy!

Lewis County Fair
7/15 through 7/19; Lowville, NY
http://www.lewiscountyfair.org/

Saratoga County Fair
7/15 through 7/20; Prospect Street, Ballston Spa, NY
http://www.saratogacountyfair.org/

Jefferson County Fair
7/15 through 7/20; Coffeen Street, Watertown, NY
http://www.jeffcofair.org/

Booneville-Oneida County Fair
7/21 through 7/27; Adirondack High School, Booneville, NY
http://www.frontiernet.net/~boonvillefair/index.htm

Clinton County Fair
7/22 through 7/27; Morrisonville, NY
http://www.clintoncountyfair.com/

Warren County Youth Fair
8/2 (only); Schroon River Road, Warrensburg, NY
http://counties.cce.cornell.edu/warren/

Franklin County Fair
08/02 through 08/10; East Main St., Malone, NY
http://www.frcofair.com

St. Lawrence County Fair
8/4 through 8/10; East Barney St., Gouverneur, NY
http://www.gouverneurfair.com/

Herkimer County Fair
8/12 through 8/17; Frankfort, NY
http://www.herkimercountyfair.org/

Essex County Fair
8/13 through 8/17; Main St., Westport, NY
http://www.essexcountyfair.org

Washington County Fair
8/18 through 8/24; Route 29, Greenwich, NY
http://www.washingtoncountyfair.com/

New York State Fair
8/21 through 9/1; State Fair Blvd., Syracuse, NY
http://www.nysfair.org/fair/

Champlain Valley Exposition
8/23 through 9/1; Pearl St., Essex Junction, VT
http://cvexpo.org/

Vermont State Fair
8/29 through 9/7; S Main St., Rutland, VT
http://www.vermontstatefair.net/

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Wednesday, July 09, 2008

Newcomb VIC to Host Climate Change Lecture

According to a media release we received last week, the SUNY College of Environmental Science & Forestry’s (ESF) Adirondack Ecological Center (AEC) and the Adirondack Park Agency Visitor Interpretive Center (VIC) in Newcomb will feature a presentation on climate change during the Huntington Lecture Series at 7 p.m. this Thursday, July 10th at the Newcomb VIC.

Colin Beier (that's him at left) is a research associate at the AEC. He will present a program titled “Changing Climate, Changing Forests: from Alaska to the Adirondacks.”

Beier will demonstrate that the impacts of climate change in the far north are much more than disappearing sea ice; the boreal forests are changing dramatically, due to increased fire, insect outbreaks and tree diebacks. These are all are linked to climatic changes in the last century.

“As the magnitude and rate of change increases, we can expect that future forests, especially in unique places like the Adirondacks, may be quite different,” Beier said. “But in what ways? What will these changes mean for the Adirondack wilderness and the people who live and visit here?”

Beier is a forest ecologist who studies the connections between economies, cultures and the natural landscapes upon which society depends. He completed his master’s research at Virginia Tech in forest ecology, and his doctoral research at the University of Alaska-Fairbanks, where he was a National Science Foundation Fellow. He has recently published several articles from his Alaska studies, including one of the first studies of the impacts of climate change in the coastal temperate rainforests of southeastern Alaska. Beier’s research interests in his new home – the Adirondack Park – follow along many of these themes: climate change, conservation, forest management, community resilience, and sustainability.

The Huntington Lecture Series is sponsored by the Adirondack Ecological Center, SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry, based in Newcomb. The programs are free and open to the public.

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Thursday, July 03, 2008

Adirondack Park Invasive Species Awareness Week

Adirondack communities and organizations will celebrate the 3rd annual Adirondack Park Invasive Species Awareness Week July 6- July 12, 2008.

WHY: Invasive plants and animals threaten Adirondack lakes, ponds, rivers, and forests, which are precious resources that underwrite the economy of many communities through recreation, tourism, forestry, and numerous other uses.

WHAT: Learn about the issues surrounding invasive species (both plant and animal, aquatic and terrestrial) and about the importance of native biodiversity in the Adirondacks by attending workshops, field trips, lectures, and control parties.

WHO: Hundreds of citizens of all ages across the Adirondack Park.

WHERE: Nature centers, natural areas, lakes, rivers, agricultural fields, parks, campgrounds, institutions of higher learning, natural history museums…

HOW: Plan an activity for adults or youth. Attend a lecture. Visit a display. Lend a hand during an invasive species control project. Be involved.

Monday, July 7, 2008
8:00am - 5pm (Aquatic Plant ID, Bolton Landing) If you have a plant that you think may be Eurasian watermilfoil but you're not sure - bring it by to have it ID'd by an expert for free! To have a plant identified, bring at least three intact plants to DFWI in a plastic bag or container with a small amount of water and the following information: name of collector, lake name, site of collection, depth at which the plant was growing, date of collection, the name and phone number of a person to contact with the results. Plants for identification should be directed to Lawrence Eichler. For more information or directions, contact DFWI at (518) 644-3541.

11:00am - 3pm (Display and Information Specialists, Lake George) Stop by the Lake George visitor center to talk to members of various local organizations about invasive species in the Lake George watershed. Learn how you can help stop the spread of invasive species in your own yard or community.

7:30pm (Presentation, Bolton Landing) "White Nose Syndrome: A New Threat to Bats in the Northeast." Hosted by the Darrin Fresh Water Institute (DFWI) and presented by Carl Herzog from NYS Department of Environmental Conservationt. Call DFWI at 518-644-3541 for more info.

Tuesday, July 8, 2008
8:00am - 5pm (Aquatic Plant ID, Bolton Landing) If you have a plant that you think may be Eurasian watermilfoil but you're not sure - bring it by to have it ID'd by an expert for free! To have a plant identified, bring at least three intact plants to DFWI in a plastic bag or container with a small amount of water and the following information: name of collector, lake name, site of collection, depth at which the plant was growing, date of collection, the name and phone number of a person to contact with the results. Plants for identification should be directed to Lawrence Eichler. For more information or directions, contact DFWI at (518) 644-3541.

9:00am - noon (Paddle, Queensbury) Canoe/Kayak Paddle, Dunham's Bay Marsh. Learn about aquatic invasives such as Eurasian watermilfoil, zebra mussels, and purple loosestrife as you paddle about the bay. Staff from the Lake Goerge Land Conservancy (LGLC) and the Lake George Association (LGA) will supply the narration; you must provide your method of staying afloat. Call the LGA at 518-668-3558 or the LGLC at 518-644-9673 to register or for more info. Advance registration is required for this event. Meet at Dunham's Bay Marina parking lot ($5 parking fee).

11:00am - 3pm (Display and Information Specialists, Lake George) Stop by the Lake George visitor center to talk to members of various local organizations about invasive species in the Lake George watershed. Learn how you can help stop the spread of invasive species in your own yard or community.

Wednesday, July 9, 2008
8:00am - 5pm (Aquatic Plant ID, Bolton Landing) If you have a plant that you think may be Eurasian watermilfoil but you're not sure - bring it by to have it ID'd by an expert for free! To have a plant identified, bring at least three intact plants to DFWI in a plastic bag or container with a small amount of water and the following information: name of collector, lake name, site of collection, depth at which the plant was growing, date of collection, the name and phone number of a person to contact with the results. Plants for identification should be directed to Lawrence Eichler. For more information or directions, contact DFWI at (518) 644-3541.

9:00am - 10:30am (Family Program, Lake George) Alien Invaders, Shepard Park. Learn all about invasive species, how they get here, and why they cause a problem. See some samples of local invaders for yourself and make your own zebra mussel paper weight. Advance registration required; Call the LGA at 518-668-3558 to register.

11:00am - 3pm (Display and Information Specialists, Lake George) Stop by the Lake George visitor center to talk to members of various local organizations about invasive species in the Lake George watershed. Learn how you can help stop the spread of invasive species in your own yard or community.

Thursday, July 10, 2008
8:00am - 5pm (Aquatic Plant ID, Bolton Landing) If you have a plant that you think may be Eurasian watermilfoil but you're not sure - bring it by to have it ID'd by an expert for free! To have a plant identified, bring at least three intact plants to DFWI in a plastic bag or container with a small amount of water and the following information: name of collector, lake name, site of collection, depth at which the plant was growing, date of collection, the name and phone number of a person to contact with the results. Plants for identification should be directed to Lawrence Eichler. For more information or directions, contact DFWI at (518) 644-3541.

10:00am - 11:00am (Interpretive Walk, Lake George) Forest Invaders, Lake George Rec Center. Led by Laurel Gailor, Cornell Cooperative Extension.

11:00am - 3pm (Display and Information Specialists, Lake George) Stop by the Lake George visitor center to talk to members of various local organizations about invasive species in the Lake George watershed. Learn how you can help stop the spread of invasive species in your own yard or community.

2:00pm - 3:00pm (Interpretive Walk, Lake George) Roadside Invaders, West Brook. Led by Laurel Gailor, Cornell Cooperative Extension.

Friday, July 11, 2008
8:00am - 5pm (Aquatic Plant ID, Bolton Landing) If you have a plant that you think may be Eurasian watermilfoil but you're not sure - bring it by to have it ID'd by an expert for free! To have a plant identified, bring at least three intact plants to DFWI in a plastic bag or container with a small amount of water and the following information: name of collector, lake name, site of collection, depth at which the plant was growing, date of collection, the name and phone number of a person to contact with the results. Plants for identification should be directed to Lawrence Eichler. For more information or directions, contact DFWI at (518) 644-3541.

9:00am - noon (Paddle, Bolton) Canoe/Kayak Paddle, Northwest Bay. Learn about aquatic invasive plants such as Eurasian watermilfoil and purple loosestrife as you paddle about the bay. Staff from the Lake George Land Conservancy (LGLC) and the Lake George Association (LGA) will supply the narration; you must provide your method of staying afloat. Call the LGA at 518-668-3558 or the LGLC at 518-644-9673 to register or for more info. Advance registration is required for this event; space is limited. Meet at Northwest Bay parking lot.

11:00am - 3pm (Display and Information Specialists, Lake George) Stop by the Lake George visitor center to talk to members of various local organizations about invasive species in the Lake George watershed. Learn how you can help stop the spread of invasive species in your own yard or community.

Saturday, July 12, 2008
10:00am - 4:00pm (Celebration, Ticonderoga) "Waterfest," at Bicentennial Park. Join in the fun at this day long event about everything water related. Help Ticonderoga celebrate their water resources through water related educational games, activities, interactive exhibits, demonstrations and much more!

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Sunday, June 29, 2008

New Route For Northville-Placid Trail

The Schenectady Gazzette is reporting some good news today - the rerouting of the ten mile hike along Route 30 from Northville to Upper Benson that starts the Northville-Placid Trail. In the process DEC is adding six miles to the trail.

Neil Woodworth, executive director of the Adirondack Mountain Club, said work could begin next year on the planned new southern section of the trail starting in Gifford’s Valley, closer to Northville.

On the planned route, which awaits final approval of the Shaker Mountain Unit Management Plan, a switch-back trail would lead hikers over the mountains framing Giffords Valley before descending north to the West Stony Creek, across the Benson Road at Little Cathead Mountain on the east side of Woods Lake, and then northwest to the existing trail, making a junction very near the North Stony campsite.

The new section would save the hikers who want to walk the entire trail from starting on Route 30 near the Northville Bridge.

From a parking area in Giffords Valley, the entire hike would be about 125 miles, and all in the woods.
The original 133-mile trail was laid out by the Adirondack Mountain Club in 1922 and 1923, during the heyday of Adirondack trail building in the 1920s and 1930s. A old ADK Guide for the NPT noted that "the primary reason the Adirondack Mountain Club was formed in 1922 was to create hiking trails. The first project W.G. Howard and his Trails Committee took on was the cutting of the Northville-Placid Trail. by the end of 1923 the trail was essentially in operating order."

The terminus of the trail were chosen for their local New York Central Railroad stations. In 1923 Robert Wickham hiked the trail into the High Peaks - he arrived there by steamer, train, and hiking the "new" NPT. His experience was published as Friendly Adirondack Peaks.

Camping spots along the trail were heavily used near populated areas and in the 1940s crib-work behind some lean-tos was used to hold trash. As plastics became more popular these became enormous trash dumps. Food waste and cans had rusted away over the years - not so with plastics, nylon, rubber and the like.

Bill White (who had hiked the trail in 1947 and again in 1971) took up the problem of littering along the trail. In the ten years between 1972 and 1982 he organized the removal of over 3,000 pounds of trash. During an interview with Sharon Brown in 1982 for Adirondack Life, White recalled his 1946 trip: "The trail is wilder now [in 1982] than it was then," he says, explaining that there was a lot more lumbering activity in the heart of the Adirondacks."

It just got a little wilder.

From South to North the Northville-Placid Trail crosses the Silver Lake Wilderness Area, Jessup River Wild Forest, West Canada Lake Wilderness Area, Moose River Plains Wild Forest, Blue Ridge Wilderness Area, Blue Mountain Wild Forest, and High Peaks Wilderness Area. It also passes through the villages of Piseco, Blue Mountain Lake, and Long Lake.

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Friday, June 27, 2008

Largest Event at Fort Ticonderoga in Modern Times

It's a big year at Fort Ticonderoga on Lake Champlain. First it's the 100th anniversary of their opening with a dedication attended by President William Howard Taft. The Pell family began it's restoration that year, a project that is continuing with the completion of the Deborah Clarke Mars Education Center that will open on July 6.

This year also marks the 250th anniversary of the French and Indian War of the Battle of Carillon, which was designated as the I Love NY "signature event," and the opening of the new exhibit "Face of War; Triumph and Tragedy at Ticonderoga, 1758-1759," the first new exhibit in many years. It details the lives of soldiers taken directly from their diaries and letters.

On the weekend of June 28 and 29th, over 2,000 re-enactors from all over the world are expected to make camp assembling to commemorate and celebrate the battle when Major General Abercromby's British Army, along with Native Americans and American Militia was defeated by a much smaller force defending the fort under the Marquis de Montcalm. The focal point of the re-enactment of the 1758 battle will be a replica of the log breastwork that was a focal point of repeated and deadly British frontal attacks.

On July 5, the British and the Black Watch will be remembered with a parade to the Scottish Cairn, accompanied by clans, bagpipes and Scots from Canada, England and the United States. On July 8, there will be a parade led by the Fort Ticonderoga Fife and Drum Corps to the Montcalm Cross in remembrance of the French victory.

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Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Adirondack Museum Suspends Lake Placid Project

Just arrived from the Adirondack Museum:

Blue Mountain Lake, N.Y. The Adirondack Museum at Blue Mountain Lake, New York announced today that it has suspended work on its plan to erect a building on Main Street in Lake Placid, N.Y. to house a new branch of the museum and its existing store.

Museum Director Caroline Welsh said that the decision was made very reluctantly and only after detailed consideration of financial and other implications of the project for the museum. The decision was made at a special meeting of the museum's Board of Trustees on June 23, 2008.

According to John Fritzinger, Chairman of the Board, the decision is the result of the cumulative impact of several key factors.

These include the extended period required to obtain the permits needed to proceed; continuing litigation over those permits that offers the prospect of even further delay and expense; escalation in costs related to the construction and operation of the museum; and the difficulty of raising the necessary capital in the face of deteriorating and uncertain financial markets, a strained economy, and the potential effects of high gas prices on museum visitation.

Ms. Welsh said the Board of Trustees is most appreciative of the strong support the Adirondack Museum has received for the Lake Placid branch from Mayor Jamie Rogers, Town of North Elba Supervisor Robi Politi, and many members of the community. She expressed the thanks of the museum to all for all their help and enthusiasm as the project moved forward.

Welsh also noted that the Board is particularly grateful for outstanding work by architects David Childs and Roger Duffy of Skidmore Owings & Merrill in creating an exciting design for the proposed new museum.

The Lake Placid project was part of the Adirondack Museum's overall strategic plan that includes the goal of projecting the museum's presence beyond Blue Mountain Lake. The Director emphasized that the goal remains in place. The museum recognizes the importance of Lake Placid as a cultural hub of the Adirondacks and a premier resort destination. Welsh said that the
museum will continue to deliver its programs and collections to the residents of and visitors to the Tri-Lakes area.

Welsh announced that the Adirondack Museum would partner with the Lake Placid Center for the Arts to offer annual exhibits at the Center's facility. "Rustic Tomorrow" will be the first exhibition. A show of unique rustic furniture created through the collaboration of noteworthy architects, designers, and craftsmen, the exhibit premiered at the museum's Blue Mountain Lake campus in May, and will travel to LPCA in late fall.

She also confirmed that museum outreach programs will continue in the village, including the popular Lake Placid "Cabin Fever Sunday" programs.

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39th Annual Lake Placid Horse Show

Lake Placid, NY - The 39th annual Lake Placid Horse Show opened on Tuesday at the North Elba Showgrounds in Lake Placid. The horse continues through Sunday and is followed at the same site by the 31st annual I Love New York Horse Show which runs July 1-6.

Heading the list of entries are the defending champions in the Lake Placid and I Love New York Horse Shows’ two Grandprix events-Todd Minikus of Loxahatchee, FL and Christine McCrea of East Windsor, CT.

Minikus, the 2001 U.S. Equestrian Federation (USEF) Horseman of the Year, will be looking for a second straight win in this week’s featured event, the $75,000 Budweiser Grandprix of Lake Placid Presented by RV Sales of Broward. McCrea will be looking to defend her title in the featured event of the I Love New York Horse Show, the $75,000 Hermès Grandprix, on Saturday, July 5.

Other past Grandprix winners entered this year include Laura Chapot, winner of the Budweiser Grandprix of Lake Placid in 1996 and 2004; Margie Engle, a ten-time American Grandprix Association Rider of the Year, who has been a Grandprix winner in Lake Placid six times; Kent Farrington, who won the Budweiser Grandprix of Lake Placid in 2005; and Molly Ashe-Cawley who won the Budweiser Grandprix of Lake Placid in 1999.

The 2008 Lake Placid Horse Show and I Love New York Horse Show sponsors includeA & M Beverages, A Placid Life, Adirondack Life, Adirondack Store, American Grandprix Association, Animal Planet, Anonymous, Bainbridge Farms LLC, Brandy Parfums, Ltd., The Brown Dog Café and Wine Bar, Budweiser, Carr-Hughes Productions, Chair 6, Champlain Valley Equipment, Charlie’s Restaurant, Charlotte Bobcats, Jane Forbes Clark, C.M. Hadfield’s Saddlery, Inc., The Cottage Café, The Country Saddler, Ltd., Crossroad’s Caterers, Crowne Plaza Resort & Golf Club, David R. Fowler Custom Tack Trunks, Deeridge Farms, Der Dau Custom Boots and Shoes, The Dutta Corp., Ecogold, Equifit, Farm and Ranch Magazine, Fox Run, Ltd., Golden Arrow Lakeside Resort, Grill 211, Mr. James Harpel, Hermès, High Peaks Resort, The Hooker Family, Horse Watch, Intercat, Inc., J. Lohr Vineyards & Wines, Jake Placid Doghouse, Janney Montgomery Scott, LLC, Juliam Farm, Lake Placid/Essex County Visitors Bureau, The Leone Family, The Levy Family, Lonesome Landing Garden Center, Mirror Lake Inn, Mountain Horse, Mr. Mike’s Pizza & Pasta, Moss Communications, Bobby & Melissa Murphy, Nicola’s On Main, On a Fence Designs & Rentals, ORDA/Whiteface Mountain, The Pepsi Bottling Group, The Phillips Family, Price Chopper, Red-Kap Sales, Royal Reflections, Ruthie’s Run, RV Sales of Broward, Sam Edelman Shoes, Sand Castle Farm, Saratoga Living, Michael & Lora Schultz, Sidelines, Storm Ridge Capital LLC, Stretton Enterprises, Town of North Elba Park District, Turtle Lane Farm, The Weeks Family, The Whiteface Lodge, Woodlea Farms, WPTZ News Channel 5, and Y106.3 - Mountain Communications LLC.

Admission to the Lake Placid and I Love New York Horse Shows is $2.00 on weekdays and $5.00 on weekends. Children under the age of 12 are admitted free. Tickets are available at the gate. For more information and schedule details, please call the Lake Placid Horse Show Association at (518) 523-9625 or visit www.lakeplacidhorseshow.com.

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Friday, June 20, 2008

Lake Placid Skating Summer Camp

Lake Placid Skater, the blog of a figure skater/speed skater living and training in Lake Placid, will be covering the Skating Summer Camp at the Olympic Center (OC). Here are some of her "bits of info about the coming week":

* Lake Placid's resident Olympic Champions, Ludmila and Oleg Protopopov, are back! The Pairs champions will be available for lessons. See their signs in the OC for more information.

* US National and International level ice dancers Melissa Gregory and Denis Petukhov will be hosting a seminar on Friday, from 6-7 pm in the 1980 rink. They are also available for private lessons. See their sign on the bulletin boards in the OC for more info.

* The first Freaky Friday of the summer will be held this Friday (of course). Check the schedule for exact time and location.

* There will be two Skating Shows on Saturday. The first will be the Adult Skating Exhibition, where the adult skaters get a chance to perform. Come support them! Check schedule for exact time and location!

* The second show is the famous Saturday Night Ice Show, in the 1932 rink! Almost every Saturday night in the summer there is a show in which campers can perform, along with a different guest skater every week. The Show is at 7:30 pm.

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Monday, June 16, 2008

An Adirondack Landscapist Lashes Out

One of the blogs we follow here at the Almanack is Mark Hobson's The Landscapist in AuSable Forks. His blog is described as "intended to showcase the landscape photography of photographers who have moved beyond the pretty picture and for whom photography is more than entertainment."

His latest post touches touches on just those points when he takes a fellow photographer to task for their fluffy, feel good, approach to nature photography. The unnamed photographer wrote:

I chose nature photography as a way of capturing and sharing the beauty, power, and fragility of wild places and the life that inhabits them, so that those who have become mired in the man-made chaos may open their eyes to the real world.
Hobson's response was scathing.
What a bunch of unadulterated sentimental, romanticized, escapist crap - just like the pictures that pour from cameras in the hands of those who subscribe to such bunk...

The idea that the human race is "wasting the precious gift of thought and inspiration" by concerning themselves with "politics, economics, religious squabbles" and that those so-called "squabbles" constitute "man-made chaos" really is a notion that is thoroughly out of touch with the "real world."
The entire piece is worth a read and necessary to really get where Hobson is going, but it sums with this gem:
IMO, making pretty pictures as a means to effect sound thinking regarding sustainability is akin to penning catchy popular ditties about the joys of firefighting as a means of effecting the dousing of the flames that are burning down the house.
WOW.

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Saturday, May 17, 2008

E-town: Light Comedy, Heavy Carousing

From Elizabethtown, a new theater group and a unique production sends along this press release:

On May 30 and 31, 2008, the North Country's newest professional theatre will present their premiere production, "Barrymore," a two-person comedy by William Luce, concerning legendary actor and infamous Broadway eccentric John Barrymore. Known along Broadway as the era's supreme wit and heir to the Barrymore family acting dynasty, Barrymore and his famed profile delivered some of the most storied performances of the twentieth century on Broadway and in film (sometimes starring opposite his famous siblings, Ethel and Lionel).

The play is set in 1942. Barrymore has rented a stage to prepare for a comeback. As he rehearses, he jokes with the audience, gossips, spars with his Stage Manager, discusses his famous family, and reminisces about better times and better roles. Although the play is largely a humorous tour around the nooks and crannies of the actor's fascinating and funny personal and professional life, it also explores the fact that the famous actor is a haunted man, yearning to recapture past successes beneath the jokes and clever one-liners.

"Jack," as he was called, was known as the "clown prince" of the royal acting family. The play highlights his acting triumphs as well as showcasing his love of bawdy limericks, quick-witted one-liners, and delicious imitations ... including send ups of famous gossip columnist Louella Parsons and his famous siblings Lionel and Ethel.

NYC and Adirondack resident Jonathan Valuckas will take the title role of the eccentric John Barrymore. Keene Valley resident Tyler Nye will perform the role of Frank, Barrymore's droll and practical Stage Manager. Phill Greenland (who locally directed "The Music Hall Revusical," "George M. Cohan In His Own Words," and "The Life and Life's Work of Edgar Allan Poe") directs, with Kathy Recchia as Producer.

Cavalcade employs an interesting concept in staging productions. Rather than producing shows in a conventional theatre space, the company is dedicated to the principle of "site-specific theatre," in which the play or musical is staged in a historically suitable or atmospheric environment, such as their recent production of "The Life and Life's Work of Edgar Allan Poe" at Elizabethtown's Victorian-era Hand House Mansion. Cavalcade will produce "The Belle of Amherst," about the life of famous poetess Emily Dickinson in July.

Barrymore, by William Luce will be presented at the Lower Level stage at the Adirondack History Center Museum Route 9N and Hand Avenue in Elizabethtown Friday, May 30 and Saturday, May 31, 2008 General admission $12 Only fifty guests can be seated at each performance, reservations are recommended Call (518) 946-8323 or visit www.cavalcadenewyork.com

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Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Blaming Hillary and Banning ATVs
3 Years Ago At Adirondack Almanack

Three years ago here at Adirondack Almanack we were quizzing our neighbors about Hillary Rodham Clinton and other women of power and fearing our neighbors opposed to the DEC's draft proposal to ban ATVs on Forest Preserve lands.

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Monday, May 12, 2008

Stamp Honors Edward Livingston Trudeau













A press release issued today:

American Lung Association Founder Honored with New U.S. Postage Stamp

WASHINGTON, D.C., May 12, 2008—As part of its Distinguished Americans series, the U.S. Postal Service released a new 76 cent stamp today that honors Dr. Edward Livingston Trudeau (1848-1915), the founder and first president of the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis, the precursor to the American Lung Association. Dr. Trudeau dedicated his life to researching and treating tuberculosis, a highly infectious disease that at one time killed one in seven people in the U.S.

Tuberculosis is also known as the White Plague or TB, and in the late 1800s, doctors did not know its cause, how to treat patients or prevent transmission of the disease. Dr. Trudeau himself contracted TB after caring for his ill brother, and moved to the Adirondacks, where he recovered. There he founded the first research laboratory dedicated to TB and helped patients recover with “open-air” treatments, promoting the treatment and containment of the disease through fresh air, rest, nourishment and a positive attitude.

“Dr. Trudeau was a true pioneer who led a public health movement and remained focused on the ideal that we can overcome a disease through coordinated research, education and advocacy,” said Bernadette Toomey, President and CEO, American Lung Association.

Under Dr. Trudeau’s leadership, the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis spearheaded research, launched the first-ever public health campaigns to halt the spread of TB, and fought for the establishment of local public health departments. Ultimately, research breakthroughs led to the first effective drug treatment for TB in the mid-1950s, resulting in a dramatic change in our nation’s public health.

“America has many reasons to celebrate Dr. Trudeau and his contributions to our country,” said Toomey. “The American Lung Association continues to honor his legacy by investing in research on asthma, COPD, lung cancer, TB, and many more lung diseases.”

The stamp bearing Dr. Trudeau’s portrait is the U.S. Postal Service’s 11th issuance in the Distinguished Americans series; it will be a 76-cent stamp, priced for three-ounce First-Class Mail letters. Artist Mark Summers created the portrait on the stamp, based on a photograph of Dr. Trudeau provided by the American Lung Association.

About the American Lung Association: Beginning our second century, the American Lung Association is the leading organization working to prevent lung disease and promote lung health. Lung disease death rates continue to increase while other leading causes of death have declined. The American Lung Association funds vital research on the causes of and treatments for lung disease. With the generous support of the public, the American Lung Association is “Improving life, one breath at a time.” For more information about the American Lung Association or to support the work it does, call 1-800-LUNG-USA (1-800-586-4872) or log on to www.lungusa.org.

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Tuesday, May 06, 2008

Prices Mean Adirondack Railroads' Time Has Come

The Adirondack Journal reported this week that Warren County supervisors "derailed" (pun apparently intended) a local tourist railroad development project by voting to pay a consultant for the design of two of the railroads train stations at Hadley and Thurman. Looking around the net, it's hard to pinpoint exactly what is going on, but it seems as though the county may be dragging its feet on the plan to improve the long neglected Delaware and Hudson RR tracks between Corinth in Saratoga County and North Creek, near the Gore Mountain Ski Area.

NY State Transportation Commissioner Astrid Glynn definitely is, when he announced $20 million in rail funding last week to go toward 15 projects statewide, extending the Adirondack Scenic Railroad from Saranac Lake to Tupper Lake was not on the list. In December 2006, former George Pataki had promised $5 million to make the 26 miles of track between the two villages passable.

Also last week, the North Creek News Enterprise (also owned by Adirondack Journal publisher Denton Publications) ran a story - "Depot Museum Faces Uncertain Future" - pointing out that the North Creek Depot Museum (rebuilt in 1993) is, in the words of museum President Helen Miner, in "a crisis situation." Apparently, the Depot Museum is not a part of the Upper Hudson River Railroad and does not receive a share of its ticket sales. The Depot survives on the proceeds of a contract with the Railroad to provide station services. They brought 13,000 people through the station last year, but may now close at the end of this season.

That's probably good news for Glens Falls Fifth Ward Supervisor William Kenny. Kenny was the only Warren County supervisor to vote against funding the new rail stations in Hadley and Thurman. Kenny has been a virulent opponent of the tourist line - a man who still lives in the 1960s when our political leaders allowed the nations railroads to be abandoned in favor of superhighways and bypasses like I-87 (the Northway) and Route 28 which bypasses North Creek.

The damage to local Adirondack economies has been dramatic and tragic - just look at any of the small towns, places like Warrensburg, Chestertown, Pottersville, Schroon Lake, and North Hudson, that have been driven to the economic brink when all the Route 9 traffic was routed out of town.

Scenic railroad
s like the Upper Hudson Railroad and the Adirondack Scenic Railroad, need the support of our political leaders, yes - but they also need to be conceived of in a new economic light. Once a trolley ran from Glens Falls to Warrensbug and connected local residents with cheap public transportation. By 1906, the Hudson Valley Railway which began operations between Glens Falls and Fort Edward, had 130 miles of track, 100 cars, 500 employees, and ran once an hour in winter and every half-hour to a quarter-hour in the summer.

Now is the time to revive the old rail beds like the Lake George-Warrensburg rail bed, which is still largely in tact, though the rails have been torn up for scrap. We need to stop turning them into bike and snowmobile trails and return them to their proper use. We need to move beyond the scenic railroad to a real light rail system that can serve us all, locals and tourists alike, and provide local employment.

When gas reaches 6, 8, and then 10 dollars a gallon, the tourists we depend on will have significant reason to take public transportation to reach their summer vacations. As gas prices rise, locals should be asking themselves why we can't hope the train to shop in Queensbury, Tupper Lake, Lake Placid, North Creek, Saratoga, or any of the other spots on the lines. Once, not that long ago, we could.

If politicians like William Kenny have their way, we never will.

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Monday, March 24, 2008

$1 Million Awarded to 18 Adirondack Projects

Here is a press release that just arrived from Governor Patterson's Office. The projects include wireless, historic preservation, affordable housing, tourism, beautification, and more.

GOVERNOR PATERSON ANNOUNCES SMART GROWTH GRANTS FOR ADIRONDACK PARK COMMUNITIES

Projects Link Sustainable Development, Environmental Protection and Community Livability

Governor David A. Paterson and Commissioner of Environmental Conservation Pete Grannis today announced “smart growth grants” for Adirondack communities to help counties, towns, villages and their partner organizations develop plans that link sustainable development, environmental protection and community livability.

A total of $1 million will be awarded to 18 projects – ranging from one proposing a new life for the Indian Lake Theater to another designing a better wireless communication network across the Adirondack Park. The initiative, announced last July, proved so popular that the DEC received more than $3 million worth of proposals from around the Park. The grants relate to a mix of local, regional and park-wide projects.

“The Adirondack Park is a unique American treasure, a special place for residents and the millions who visit each year,” said Governor David A. Paterson. “The Park serves as a model for how to merge environmental sensitivity with the pressing needs of development and expansion. By providing local planning assistance, we hope to meet the challenge of developing sustainable communities while protecting natural resources.”

“This program is dedicated to the belief that sustainable development and environmental protection go hand-in-hand,” said Commissioner Grannis. “Safeguarding the assets of the forest preserve and fostering sustainable development and a good quality of life for residents throughout the Park is in everyone’s best interest. This initiative provides the local planning assistance needed to accomplish both. The overwhelming response demonstrates the program struck a chord with Adirondack Park communities.”

Smart growth is sensible, planned growth that balances the need for economic development with concerns about quality-of-life, such as preserving the natural and built environment. Smart growth is also becoming a useful tool to attract businesses that value community quality-of-life.

The 2007-08 Environmental Protection Fund included $2 million in grants to promote smart growth initiatives; $1 million was earmarked for the Adirondacks. Smart growth can be useful in addressing land-use issues facing rural communities – workforce housing, aging infrastructure, water quality, economic development, open space protection and village/hamlet revitalization.

The grant winners include 12 projects that address local issues, four that are regional in nature and two that are park-wide in impact.

The grants include:

- $106,971 to the Town of Saranac to develop the “Wireless Clearinghouse” project to create a comprehensive plan for identifying potential structures for telecommunications infrastructure to bolster wireless networks in the Park. The State University of New York at Plattsburgh and the Adirondack North Country Association will assist the Town;

- $100,000 to the Town of Tupper Lake to produce a “Community Development Priorities” plan. Part of the plan includes developing a “visual identity” for the Town and Village of Tupper Lake, and concept designs for streetscape and waterfront projects;

- $42,600 to the Town of Indian Lake to plan the re-opening of the Indian Lake Theater. The 250-seat, Main Street venue has been closed for more than a year. Local officials want to explore re-opening the facility as a year-round community stage and screen, offering films and musical and theatrical performances, and a public space for schools, libraries and other organizations for meetings, lectures and seminars;

- $100,000 to Essex County to create an “Essex County Destination Master Plan” that will focus on communities beyond Lake Placid. It will explore opportunities to take advantage of recreational and natural resources in an economically sustainable way in locales such as Moriah, North Elba, Schroon Lake, Ticonderoga and Wilmington;

- $50,000 to the Town of Wilmington to conduct feasibility studies for a community center, municipal offices, historical society building and a fly fishing museum; and

- $35,000 to the Town of Chester to make plans for retaining existing affordable housing and establishing new affordable housing opportunities for working families.

Senator Betty Little said: “Balancing stewardship of the environment with the economic, housing and infrastructure needs of our Adirondack villages, towns and counties is critically important. I am pleased to see this partnership between the State and our local governments. I want to thank Commissioner Grannis for spearheading this initiative and congratulate the recipients for their successful applications.”

Assemblywoman Teresa Sayward said: “I applaud Commissioner Grannis and the DEC for addressing the needs of the North Country. These grants as well as collaboration among State and local officials, business leaders and concerned citizens are a good step toward a balanced approach to our economic development while sustaining the character of the Adirondack region.”

Assemblywoman Janet Duprey said: “I am pleased DEC has recognized the unique issues facing municipalities within the Adirondack Park. I congratulate the local governments that have been awarded smart-growth funding and look forward to working with these communities as they complete these projects. The large number of competitors for the grants points out the struggles facing Adirondack Park municipalities, and I encourage Commissioner Grannis and DEC to continue this competitive grant program.”

Adirondack Park Agency Chairman Curt Stiles said: “We were impressed by the innovative and comprehensive grant applications that were submitted by Adirondack municipalities. We extend our congratulations to the grantees and look forward to the successful implementation of their plans. This was a very competitive grant program and demonstrated a strong need for future support. Partnering with local governments and State agencies enables smart growth through synergy and shared values, and makes for stronger communities.”

Upstate Empire State Development Corporation Chairman Dan Gundersen said: “I look forward to seeing these projects enhance and shape the Adirondack communities in a way that invites economic development that is compatible with the Adirondack’s natural environment.”

Secretary of State Lorraine Cortés-Vázquez said: “The Adirondack smart-growth initiative represents a model for inter-agency and inter-governmental collaboration on some critical challenges and opportunities in the Adirondacks. With these grants, the State and the individual Adirondack communities have demonstrated an impressive commitment to economic and environmental sustainability in the region.”

Brian L. Houseal, Executive Director of the Adirondack Council, said: “It was a great pleasure to stand with Commissioner Grannis last summer as he announced in Lake George that half of the State's smart growth grants would be awarded to communities and organizations in the Adirondack Park. Sound planning is a wise investment for municipalities, and it helps preserve open space, natural beauty, water quality, and wildlife habitat.”

Established in 1892, the Adirondack Park features world-class natural and cultural resources, including the Nation’s only constitutionally-protected wild forest lands. In contrast to America’s national parks in which no one resides, the Adirondack Park is home to 130,000 full-time residents and hundreds of businesses whose future depends on continued protection of the natural resources and a sustainable economy.

Many Adirondack communities lack the resources to comprehensively address the land-use challenges before them. The smart-growth grants program will provide communities with technical capabilities necessary to plan for the future.

Read More......

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

African American History - Essex County Expulsions?

It's February and that means a post on some aspect of African American history in the Adirondacks.
Here is last year's popular list of stories.

I recently discovered that one of the Almanack's post, The Ku Klux Klan in the Adirondacks, had been used for the companion website of the new PBS documentary film Banished: American Ethnic Cleansings. As a result of the attention, I thought I'd dig a little deeper on the issue of racial cleansing and the Adirondacks.

Expulsions and Sundown Towns
In Banished, filmmaker Marco Williams covers the expulsions of African Americans from towns and counties across America in the period 1865-1930. The film is based on the original research of Elliot Jaspin, whose work I based my original blog post on.

Suffice it to say that African Americans were driven from their homes and land (by harassment, violence, or pseudo-legal means) by local whites for a variety of reasons. After they had fled local whites took possession of their property, often using the legal tool of Adverse Possession.

Another aspect of racial expulsion are Sundown Towns, so named because non-whites (often Asian, African-Americans, and Native Americans) were not allowed to remain in town after sundown. There were thousands of American Sundown Towns whose residents worked hard to keep their communities all-white.

James Loewen, who wrote a book on the subject, defined sundown towns as "A community of more than 1,000 people that has excluded blacks for decades to such a degree that they have made up less than 0.1 percent of the population." Using violence, local laws, and even posted signs like "nigger, don't let the sun go down on YOU," townspeople systematically kept non-whites from living in or passing through after the sun went down - which still allowed for unskilled labor during the day. According to Loewen, census records may show a number of blacks in a town - but they’re mostly single adults (usually female domestic servants).

African Americans in Essex County
After the Civil War, African Americans moved just about everywhere in the country. Some places in the North actually recruited former slaves to live there. You'll recall our post on New York land speculator and abolitionist Gerritt Smith who offered 120,000 acres in Essex and Franklin counties to African-Americans before the Civil War - many settled there, mostly well-educated New Yorkers and their children.

Although it has been dismissed as a dismal failure by later Adirondack historians (particularly Albert Donaldson, who portrayed them as lazy) census records indicate that black families held land in five Adirondack counties - at least for a time.

The African American settlers made homesteads in North Elba (near the White Church-Grange Hall) naming their settlement "Timbuctoo" - for a number of years, Lake Placid was generally known by the name Timbuctoo. Others settled (along with some whites) near Averyville, at what would become Newman - one spot long known as "Nigger's Clearing" on the Chubb River apparently contains an African American cemetery.

Their names were Lymon Epps, Thomas Jefferson, Sam Jefferson, the Robbins, Morhouse, Ware, Lyon, Craig, and Frazier families, to name a few.

Here is a look at the numbers of people identifying as negro/colored on the census from 1820 to 1970:


1820
1830
1840
1850
1860
1870
1880
1890
1900
1910
1920
1930
1940
1950
1960
Essex County
28
60
78
50
123
80
112
108
60
82
36
82
78
115
122
% of Co. Total
.22
.31
.33
.16
.44
.28
.32
.33
.20
.25
.11
.24
.23
.33
.33
Franklin County
0
24
3
62
19
27
37
52
62
53
47
81
70
110
62
% of Co. Total
0
.21
.01
.25
.06
.09
.11
.14
.14
.12
.11
.18
.16
.25
.14

Obviously, there are some anomalies. The Timbuctoo Grants were settled during 1846-1853, which reflects the 1850 numbers. By 1870 many (perhaps half) of those settlers had abandoned their grants. The numbers began to rebound by 1880 reaching a high point in 1890, reflecting the growth of existing black families and the movement of north of new ones after the civil war.

However, it appears as though the same phenomenon described above that occurred elsewhere, may have also occurred in Essex County - the home of John Brown. Between 1890 and 1920 African Americans both left Essex County in large numbers, and failed to move into Essex County. Whats more, the population make-up shifted from families to adults, who presumably were largely servants and laborers.

Census records indicate that the African Americans living in Essex County in 1890 were largely families and that by 1920, most were adults. In 1890, 51 percent of African Americans in Essex County were over the age of 20. By 1920, 75 percent were over the age of 20.

Simply put, the 30 -year period from 1890 to 1920 saw a dramatic decline in the number of African American families living in Essex County.

What Happened?
Beginning in the period around 1890, as Wikipedia puts it, "social fears aroused by rapid changes in many major cities as they absorbed immigrants from southern and eastern Europe, Southern blacks of the Great Migration and whites from rural areas" led to increased racial tensions. This was evidenced most directly by revival of the Ku Klux Klan in 1915 and the popularity of the film The Birth of a Nation, so much that:
At its peak in the mid-1920s, the [KKK] organization included about 15% of the nation's eligible population, approximately 4–5 million men. The second KKK typically preached racism, anti-Catholicism, anti-Communism, nativism, and anti-Semitism. Some local groups took part in lynchings and other violent activities. [Ed. Note: In 1922 there was a U.S. Senate filibuster against an anti-lynching law.]
At the same time wealthy white urbanites began to take up land in Essex County in increasing numbers organizing themselves along racial and religious lines. The Lake Placid Club, for instance, was organized in 1898 and came to define the Lake Placid/North Elba area as a theme park of the wealthy protestant elite.

According to the Lake Placid Club's bylaws published in their 1928 yearbook,the club excluded all non-whites, Jews and "every person against which there is social, race, moral, or fiscal objection." "Except as servants," it was noted, "negroes are not admitted."

At the same time, open racism and xenophobia were on the rise in Essex County. In 1915, a "fearsome body" of Ku Klux Klan arrived in full costume at a masquerade ball held at the Happy Hour Theater in Lake Placid. Resorts throughout the region banned people of color and Jews from their grounds.

We've already noted the "Gentile trade solicited" message in a 1910 advertisement for Taylor's on Schroon, but there were many others. For example, a 1920s cover of a brochure for Morley's at Lake Pleasant read:
We refuse no one on account of religious belief. But we have a large regular patronage [who] constitute the society of the place. For reasons which we cannot understand, they are averse to association with Hebrews. Under the circumstances we feel it is our duty to advise those of that race that we cannot be responsible for their entertainment at Morley's.
By the mid-1920s Klan activity was prevalent enough in Lake Placid that even tourist could get into the act. One meeting was attended by two English tourists, John and Cora Gordon who wrote about their experience in On Wandering Wheels: Through Roadside Camps from Maine to Georgia in an Old Sedan Car (1928).

In August 1923 the Klan began to organize in earnest in North Elba. There was a cross burning with about 40 attendees at Eagle Bay, another was held on Christmas Eve, and at least three more reported in local papers. According to the Wilmington resident Judy Bowen, the old Wilmington Town Hall was built by Klan members in the early 1920s to serve as a meeting hall; the group took the name HEO [Help Each Other] Club, to disguise its true motives. The building was taken over by the American Legion after World War II.

In November 1924 burning crosses were reported to be "almost nightly occurrences on the hills around the city" of Glens Falls. The Klan held organizational meetings and burnt crosses on at least two consecutive nights in Ticonderoga.

Local Violence
There are no reports of mass exclusions of African Americans or race riots in Essex County like the 25 that occurred in the first six months of 1919, a period John Hope Franklin called "the greatest period of interracial strife the nation had ever witnessed."

Still, there are indications that harassment, burnings, beatings, and killings based on race did occur in Essex County. We received the following story after our first report on the Klan in the region from a Wilmington woman (she thought this story dated from the early 1930s):
My mom had told me how when she was a little girl the kkk had burned a house down just up a ways on the Whiteface Memorial Highway, and had run the family out of town.
Although most stories like these probably went unreported in the local press, here are a few that did make the papers:

In 1930, William Treadwell, a 28-year-old black chauffeur, was beaten to death on the West Valley Road near the junction of Oneida Avenue. His offense was attempting to date a white woman that his assailant Lewis Severance, 30, also admired. Severance was charged with second degree manslaughter even though Treadwell's skull had been fractured, apparently with a blunt instrument.

In 1931, 23-year-old John Jones was shot near Alder Camp at Averyville by William Wilcox II in what Wilcox described as a hunting accident; he said he believed he was shooting at a woodchuck.

In 1932, a "negro hermit" about 35 years old was killed near Long Lake by "a posse" that included members of State Police Troop B (C. B. McCann) and locals. According to local press reports the posse was responding "because trappers in the vicinity of Newcomb had been frightened by the appearance of a negro hermit living in the woods, officers attempting to capture the man, killed him and brought his body in to Indian Lake on a sled." At the time killed he was living in a cabin north of Newcomb. He was wearing rabbit skin clothing and his shoes were wrapped in deer hide - he wore a a shaggy beard and had long hair; in his pockets were a $6.00 in Canadian money and a harmonica. His body was buried in Union Cemetery in North Creek after "hundreds of morbidly curious persons filed past" his open coffin as it lay at a North Creek undertaker. Because the man lived "just within the borders of Essex County," that county paid the bill for his burial. It was noted that he had an old wound over his temple "deep enough for a pencil to lie in it." Ernest Blanchard and Lester Turner were awarded a bounty after the killing. [Obviously, we'll have to write more about this story in a future post!]

They didn't end in the 1930s:

In 1942 the synagogue in Lake Placid and the Jewish Cemetery in Saranac Lake were both vandalized in the same week.

In 1947, William Grant, a 52-year-old employee of the Monopole restaurant in Port Henry was dragged into a car, driven into the woods and beaten by three men who had used racial slurs: Carl LaDue, Peter Potskowski, and Martin Capuano. LaDue received probation and the other two men were sentenced to time served. Grant was beaten so severely he was unable to work again.

A Note on African American Tourism
The historian Cotten Seiler noted in an essay for American Quarterly (2006) that "African American's desire and fitness for citizenship were tethered to, and divined in, their participation in automobility - a practice that fused self-determination and self-representation, mobility, consumption, and social encounter."

This appears to be borne out in African American tourism in Essex County. For example, African Americans journeyed to the region annually in caravans of touring cars in the 1920s and 1930s to remember John Brown's contribution to American progress. In 1922 (the year before the Klan's North Elba revival) the John Brown Memorial Association was organized and annual automobile trips of African Americans were begun from Philadelphia to Brown's grave. Over the years the Lake Placid News' coverage of these ever larger events were generally disparaging by subtly suggesting that African Americans had ignored John Brown since he was buried there in 1859, that organizers of the Association and the Brown grandchildren were motivated by profit, and even suggesting that the "pilgrims" to the "shrine" were un-American, or were at least disingenuous. The paper praised Florida at the time for having "few negroes" and heaped praise on rich white portrayals of "negro exaltations" at the Lake Placid Club and elsewhere.

Upon arrival in North Elba members of the caravans often met with sympathetic locals, and presented public programs in the Lake Placid area. In 1928, the John Brown Memorial Association even presented that bastion of racist respectability (and home to annual all-white minstrel shows) the Lake Placid Club a painting of John Brown famously kissing an African American child as he left jail to be hung. Does anyone know where is it now?

Of course tourist travel by car for African Americans could be difficult. At least two guides for black drivers were published: The Negro Motorist Green Book [full text] and Travelguide: Vacation and Recreation Without Humiliation (these were published from 1937 to 1957). They listed safe accommodations for African Americans "to save the travelers of the race as many difficulties and embarrassments as possible."

In a 1999 article for The Journal of Negro History, Mark S. Foster noted:
Nevertheless, for inexperienced black motorists, "pleasure" trips could quickly turn into unpleasant ordeals. In addition to numerous mechanical breakdowns and flat tires, poor roads, frequent detours and uncertain ferry schedules, black motorists encountered obstacles and challenges unknown by their white brethren. One of the most unnerving was figuring out local racial customs and etiquette in unfamiliar locales. Even in the Deep South, segregation practices varied considerably from town to town. Behavior which was acceptable in one town might plunge the unwary traveler into deep trouble five miles farther down the road. Purchasing gasoline was a brief, impersonal transaction; most white service station operators willingly accepted cash from black motorists. But securing decent food and lodging on the road was more problematical.
So the question that remains is: Where did these African American automobilers stay while in Essex County? In 1930 members of the Association stayed at the Mapledale Cottage, on Main Street, opposite the North Elba Town Hall - notable speakers included Clarence Darrow, and A. Philip Randolph. Before then, who knows?

Why is this important?
Not only does it reveal that the sundown town/expulsion phenomenon may have occurred in Essex County, but it also reveals that race relations in Essex County changed over time (also indicated by the rise of Klan activities). It also poses new questions: What was the role of segregated institutions such as the Lake Placid Club in fostering local change in race relations? What happened to the land owned by African Americans? [Not a single African American was listed as a farmer in the 1910 census.] Did the tourist industry perpetuate dislocation of African Americans and, if it did, what about poor whites?

Help Explore This Issue
If anyone has access to town level numbers for African Americans in Essex County, I'd love to hear from you. It's known that in 1930, there were just 29 blacks in North Elba out of a population of 6,472 (including 478 foreign born). Three local towns contained no African Americans: Crown Point (pop. 1,468), Schroon (932), and North Hudson (235); Ticonderoga contained just one (population of 5,105). Moriah, the second largest town in Essex County, had 45 black residents out of 6,191 (189 foreign born). I suspect, that a look at the North Elba and Ticonderoga town numbers would reveal an even more startling and dramatic change. The experience of African Americans in Essex County likely varied to some degree depending on where they lived.

If you know of black-run accommodations in Essex County before 1970, drop me a note.

Josiah Hasbrook - An African American settler at North Elba who knew John Brown and fought in the Civil War before returning to North Elba in about 1866. What happened to persuade Hasbrook to move he and his wife from their 80 acre farm to Wesport in 1871 and then later to Massachusetts?


Suggested Reading

James Loewen's Sundown Towns: A Hidden Dimension of American Racism

Elliot Jaspin's Buried in the Bitter Waters: The Hidden History of Racial Cleansing in America

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