Hands On Workshop Series at Red Hook Library: Art Journaling

Having creative outlets as a habit has been linked to happiness and improved mental health. Get your year started off creatively with the next in the Red Hook Public Library series of Hands On workshops — Art Journaling for adults

Learn tips and techniques in creating a daily practice of drawing, doodling, painting and collage from local artist Pamela Deitrich. Bring favorite drawing tools and a blank sketchbook if you’d like, but supplies will also be provided.

DATE/TIME:
Saturday, January 5th, 2019: 10:30am – 12pm

LOCATION:
Red Hook Public Library
7444 South Broadway
Red Hook, New York 12571

MORE:
Intended for adults
Registration is required online or by calling the library at 845-758-3241
redhooklibrary.org
Facebook.com/redhooklibrary

 

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Hudson Area Library Local History Talk on Women’s Role in the Leisler Rebellion

The Hudson Area Library presents Local History Talk on Women’s Role in the Leisler Rebellion.

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The Hudson Area Library presents Local History Talk on Women’s Role in the Leisler Rebellion.

The Hudson Area Library History Room, in collaboration with the  Leisler Institute for the Study of Early New York History & the Gotham Center for New York City History present the latest in its Local History Speaker series: ‘How Their Poor Wives Do’: The Role of Women in Late Seventeenth-century New York Politics by David Voorhees,

Widespread female violence against men is found in the records of the 1689 New York
uprising popularly known as “Leisler’s Rebellion.” Indeed, women played a prominent role in the uprising. This talk by the director of the Leisler Institute explores this outburst of activism among New York women a generation after the English takeover of New Netherland.

Dr. Voorhees is director of the Jacob Leisler Papers Project, formerly located at New York
University, as well as the Jacob Leisler Institute headquartered in Hudson. He’s also managing editor of de Halve Maen (The Half Moon), a quarterly scholarly journal published by The Holland Society of New York. An NYU research scientist, he is former managing reference history editor at Charles Scribner’s Sons and has published numerous historical works and articles, and been a consultant on historical exhibits at the Museum of the City of New York and the Bard Graduate Center in Manhattan among others.

A question and answer period and refreshments will follow the talk.

The Jacob Leisler Institute for the Study of Early New York History is an independent, not-for-profit study and research center devoted to collecting, preserving, and disseminating information relating to colonial New York under English rule. In the years spanning 1664 to 1773, New York province’s diverse European settlements and Native American and African populations fused into a cosmopolitan colonial territory with ties throughout the Atlantic World. The Institute is unique in focusing on this under examined 109-year period in American history. The Institute contains a collection of original, digital, and/or paper copies of primary source manuscripts, books, maps, and illustrative materials, as well as a library of secondary resources that provide scholarly context to the primary sources. The Jacob Leisler Institute is an open resource for both scholars and the interested public.

The Hudson Area Library History Room houses a special collection that pertains to the history of the City of Hudson, Greenport and Stockport; as well as Columbia County and New York State. The History Room also hosts the Local History Speaker Series at the library, offering free monthly talks on diverse topics related to the history of Hudson, Greenport, Stockport, and Columbia County.

The History Room hours are Tuesdays 4 – 6pm and Saturdays 10am – 12pm, during which
people visit and browse the extensive collection of city directories, yearbooks and local history books; and research items in the archival collection. The public can also request information on local history that volunteers will research. Appointments are available upon request. For more information email reference@hudsonarealibrary.org, call 518.828.1792 x100, or visit the main desk in the library.

DATE/TIME:
Thursday, January 10, 2019: 6pm to 7:30pm

LOCATION:
Hudson Area Library
Community Room, (wheelchair accessible)
51 N. 5th St. (at State St.)
Hudson, NY 12534

ADMISSION:
Free and open to the public.

MORE:
HudsonAreaLibrary.org
email: programs@hudsonarealibrary.org
Tel: 518-828-1792 x101, or visit the main desk in the library

 

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Happy New Year!

Happy New Year from Columbia County Current!

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Happy New Year from Columbia County Current! Here’s to a great 2019!

 

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Gail Giles “Winter Light” Art Exhibit at Chatham Bookstore

The Chatham Bookstore provides artists with a venue to display their work. Currently on display is “Winter Light” by Gail Giles.

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SUNSET.Old Pond 23” x 40” oil on canvas

In addition to offering current and classic books for readers of all ages, plus a diverse selection of art supplies, the Chatham Bookstore also provides artists with a venue to display their work.

Currently on display is “Winter Light” by Gail Giles. Giles has been painting and drawing – in all seasons – the pathways, fields and vistas of the Columbia County and Hudson Valley region for more than forty years. The paintings in Winter Light reflect the quiet beauty of our longest season.

DATE/TIME:
Exhibit runs through through January 16, 2019.

LOCATION:
The Chatham Bookstore
27 Main Street
Chatham, NY 12037

ADMISSION:
Free

MORE:
ChathamBookStore.com
facebook.com/thechathambookstore

 

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First Day Hike at Copake Iron Works Historic Site

The Friends of Taconic State Park are hosting their first  for annual New Year’s Day Hike to the Bash Bish Falls. The group will meet at Taconic State Park headquarters, and head off to the Falls via the Iron Works Heritage trail.

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The Friends of Taconic State Park are hosting their first  for annual New Year’s Day Hike to the Bash Bish Falls. The group will meet at Taconic State Park headquarters, and head off to the Falls via the Iron Works Heritage trail.

This is a family friendly hike of about 3 miles. On the return, there will be a warm campfire, hot cocoa and snacks.
DATE/TIME:
Tuesday, January 1, 2019: 1pm
LOCATION:
Full walk (3 miles) meets at Taconic State Park headquarters
253 State Route 344
Copake Falls, NY
Shorter options: Meet at the Copake Iron Works, 35 Valley View Road in Copake Falls, around 1:15 or at the Bash Bish Falls lower parking lot around 1:30 -further east on Route 344.

 

 

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