Six on History: Local History - Places History Teachers Go Over The Holiday Break

4 views
Skip to first unread message

panaritisp

unread,
Dec 24, 2021, 12:33:25 AM12/24/21
to Six on History

Welcome back to Six on History   Happy Holidays

If you like what you find on the "Six on History" blog, please share w/your contacts


And please don't forget to check out the pertinent images attached to every post

Go to the Six on History Archive to search past posts/articles click "labels" on the left when there and the topics will collapse.
Thanks 

panaritisp -5.jpg

Phil Panaritis


Six on History: Places  History Teachers Go Over The Holiday Break


1) Welcome to MAAP: Mapping the African American Past, Columbia                         University, dozens of Then and Now NYC sites


Place in Focus
Duke Ellington

Duke Ellington was a composer, musician, and bandleader who changed the sound of American music and took its new sound around the world.

 Places Navigator
Experience MAAP through the Places Navigator

Use the Places Navigator to explore detailed views of modern and historic maps that connect to all MAAP places.

Lesson Plans Use MAAP in your classroom

Lesson Plans developed at Teachers College help students explore themes such as:

  •  Community and Culture
  •  Resistance and Self-Determination
  •  Building New York
Library
Browse the collection

In the library you can can access all MAAP videos, images, and historic maps from the MAAP library.


Mapping the African American Past, Columbia U, screenshot some sites to visit in NYC .png




2) Smith Point County Park (LI) Wilderness Visitor Center Guided Beach              Walk, Newsday

Join a park ranger for a nature walk along Smith Point County Park..jpg

"WINTER SEARCH PARTY Take a discovery walk with a park ranger along the back dune and ocean shore to search for signs of winter wildlife on the barrier beach. Look for animal tracks, winter seashells on the beach, snowbirds and more, geared for ages 8-12. Beach Detectives find a sign and earn a prize, free hot chocolate at the Visitor Center. 

CDC guidelines will be enforced, 2-3:30 p.m. Dec. 26, free, take William Floyd Parkway (Route 46) to Smith Point County Park for access to the Wilderness Visitor Center. Parking is available in the Smith Point parking lot just to the east/on the left, nps.gov, 631-281-3010."

10 events, things to do this weekend on Long Island



3) Join Us for a First Day Hike! Olana State Historic Site 5720 State Route 9G,           Hudson, NY 12534

" ...sweeping views of the Hudson River and Catskill Mountains as you approach and enter the Main House as a guest of Frederic Church. Discover the treasures of Olana’s Main House with knowledgeable interpreters to guide your visit."

Clouds_over_Olana_Frederic_Edwin_Church 1871.jpg
         Clouds Over Olana, Frederic Church

January 1, 2022 | 10:00-11:00AM & 1:00-2:00PM

Celebrate the New Year with Olana State Historic Site's expansive views! Learn more about Olana and its artist-designed landscape on this special First Day Hike. Open to all!

FREE. Limited capacity, advance registration required. For more information, please contact educ...@olana.org or call (518) 751-6938.


First Webinar of the Year
January 11 | 6:00 PM - 7:00 PM

Learn more about the introduction, spread, and management of invasive species during this webinar. The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation invasive species forester Rob Cole and filmmaker Steve Powers will discuss the recent documentary, Uninvited.

Their presentation will highlight some of the species threatening New York's environment and economy, while also showing some innovative ways that New York State is combating these threats. This webinar will feature information about the documentary’s production and highlight the collaborative work of DEC and its partners. The introduction, spread, and management of invasive species are heavily influenced by the actions of citizens who live, work, and recreate on public and private lands and waterways of New York. Join us to learn more about what you can do to prevent, manage and spread awareness about the spread of harmful invasives and watch the documentary before the webinar at this link




Holiday Season Tour Dates

We are offering landscape and house tours on December 26 and 30.

There will be no tours on December 24, 25, 31, and January 1.


Listen to our Winter Mix!

Basilica Hudson presents, Ode to the Hudson River. This mix was curated to be listened to while watching the sunset or enjoying the winter landscape. Click the link here to tune in and watch the sunset on the Olana Eye while you're at it!

Become a Member and Share OLANA with Local Students

This year, membership will help fund free tickets to Olana’s Family Explorer Tours for local students. A percentage of membership support will be used to help provide students and families in Hudson and the surrounding areas with free vouchers for Explorer Tours. OLANA’s Explorer Tours are an intergenerational learning experience at Olana.

To learn more or become a member today, click here.

Tour OLANA

Tour Hours: Friday - Sunday | 11:00am - 3:00pm
Store Hours: Friday - Sunday | 10:00am - 4:00pm

The landscape is free and open every day from 8 AM to sunset. 

Tour Olana's Historic Landscape by walking and/or electric carriage. Enjoy spectacular views of Olana's artist-designed landscape and discover the treasures inside with knowledgeable interpreters to guide your visit. 
 
To learn more about tour times and tickets,
 
Members at the Artists' Circle and above receive free entry into the Main House.
To become a member, click here.
 
Watch the sunset on the OLANA EYE Skycam

While we encourage our Hudson Valley friends and supporters to #RecreateLocal by exploring Olana, you can also enjoy Frederic Church's iconic views from anywhere in the world using the OLANA EYE Skycam. Watch by clicking here.

The landscape is free and open to all from 8AM to sunset. Stop the spread. Wear a mask and keep 6 feet apart. Leashed dogs welcome. Olana is a Carry In-Carry Out park. Please do your part to keep Olana beautiful!

Discover Olana's 
Landscape Virtually

Virtual visitors can now learn more about Olana's Historic Landscape at any time and from around the world. We've released the final installment of our 10-part video series.

Click here to find all tour videos on our website. Or, watch and subscribe to The Olana Partnership on YouTube.

Hours

Open daily, 8AM - Sunset

Friday-Sunday
11 AM to 3 PM

OLANA MUSEUM STORE
Friday-Sunday
10 AM to 4 PM

To learn more, click here.   

Olana State Historic Site operated by The Olana Partnership in a cooperative agreement with New York State Parks.




4) 2022 Catskills Fire Tower Hiking Challenge Getting Underway, New York            Almanack

Hunter-Mountain-Fire-Tower-provided-by-Catskill-Center NY.png

2022 Catskills Fire Tower Hiking Challenge Getting Underway

The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) has announced the 2022 Catskills Fire Tower Challenge.

Starting January 1st, 2022, visitors are challenged to hike each of the six historic fire towers in the Catskill Park and submit information about their visit at any time during the year to earn recognition and prizes.

Read more »





5) 20 Abandoned Places in NYC: Asylums, Hospitals, Power Plants, Islands,      Forts - Untapped New York

"Here are Untapped Cities’ favorite abandoned spots in New York City and the surrounding area. Some are break-in-able, some open to the public, some only for the intrepid. It features some great summer escapes like Fort TottenDead Horse Bay and Bannerman’s Island, as well as some great winter expeditions. Some places are harder to access, like Glenwood Power Plant and the Gowanus Batcave (both of which have recently been closed off for gutting/renovation, North Brother Island, and some of the abandoned theaters."





6) CITY INVESTS $11 MILLION IN OLD STONE HOUSE PRESERVATION,                   brooklyn paper.com

"Mayor Bill de Blasio on Thursday presented Park Slope’s historic Old Stone House with a giant check for nearly $11 million, intent on preserving and restoring the centuries-old landmark rife with historical significance.

The house, which currently sits in Washington Park, is a 20th-century reconstruction of a home originally built in 1699 that was, in the mayor’s words, “literally one of the most important sites of the entire American Revolution.”

“We are standing in front of a site where the American Revolutionary forces literally had their backs to the wall,” de Blasio said at an event unveiling the investment. “And where the fate of the American Revolution hung in the balance.”

In the pivotal Battle of Brooklyn in 1776, a group of about 400 soldiers from Maryland held the line against a much larger 2,000-strong regiment of British Redcoats at the Old Stone House, allowing George Washington and most of the American troops to cross the East River into Manhattan and escape to fight another day.

The Maryland 400, as they’ve come to be known, did eventually surrender to the British, who proceeded to occupy Brooklyn and Manhattan. But the heroics of the group at the Old Stone House were pivotal to preventing an early American defeat in the war: area Councilmember and Comptroller-elect Brad Lander on Thursday quoted George Washington as saying the battle was “an hour more fateful for the American democracy than any other.” [can't find that quote anywhere. But GW did say "Good God, what brave fellows I must lose."]

Over a century later, the house would again cement its place in Brooklyn history as the original clubhouse of the Brooklyn Superbas, the baseball club that became the Brooklyn Dodgers.

The house was demolished and buried under landfill in the late 19th century [but would that have happened if we'd won the battle?], but was excavated and rebuilt using the original stonemasonry into an exact replica in the 1930s. It was intended to be used as a recreational facility at the newly-constructed JJ Byrne Playground, but historically-minded Brooklynites lobbied for its recognition as a historic site starting in the 1970s, when historic preservation was going mainstream. Today, it serves as a museum, and provides year-round educational and cultural programming.

De Blasio entered city politics as the area’s councilmember in 2002, and made restoring the house and the park priorities. 

“The park used to be a little funky. The playground was not the most modern playground,” Hizzoner said, noting that he and Lander, his successor, had invested city funds in restoration. “This whole area has blossomed, so to me it’s also a homecoming.”

The house, which was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2012, is maintained through a mix of public and private funds, and the $10.95 million investment presented Thursday represents a massive cash infusion dedicated to keeping history alive at the abode.

“The Battle of Brooklyn is a story of resilience. And it was a very critical moment in our history,” said Kim Maier [excellent educator, OSH is great for class trips!], executive director of the Old Stone House, on Thursday. “But it’s also a lesson we can all learn from in the future. Because our choices and our actions are what move us forward as a city, as a community, and as a nation overall.”




AFRICAN-GROVE The African Theater, which had its first performance on Sept. 17, 1821, is both an inspiration and a cautionary tale.jpg
The Dyckman Farmhouse, as seen from the steps on 204th Street. NYC.jpg
brooklyn-in-1897-1200x895 NYC.jpeg
house jacob leisler Whitehall street 1st brick dwellin.jpg
brooklyn-heights-promenade-penny-bridge-3A 1920s painting of the Penny Bridge by Isabel Lydia Whitney. Image via Brooklyn Museum.jpg
Currier & Ives Washington enters NYC.jpg
brooklyn-heights-promenade-history-1949-brooklyn-public-library The Brooklyn Heights Promenade under construction, 1949. Photo from the Brooklyn Daily Eagle.jpg
Thomas Cole View of Hoosac Mountain... 1834 88.67.jpg
An LGBT parade through New York City on Christopher Street Gay Liberation Day 1971. LBGTQ.jpg
AbbattGloversRock.jpg
battle-pass-rock-prospect-park-brooklyn-NYC-untapped-cities1.jpg
battle_long_island_map.jpg
The Hudson-Raritan Estuary is a system of bays and tidal rivers where the Hudson, Hackensack, Passaic, Rahway, and Raritan rivers meet the Atlantic Ocean. Map.jpg
Domino Park in May 2021.jpg
Ashokan-Reservoir-Construction-Catskill-Aqueduct-NYC-Drinking-Water.jpg
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages