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Paterson Day 2009 http://www.patersonday.com Sunday February 22 Thu, 02 Feb 2012 03:37:52 +0000 http://wordpress.org/?v=2.3.3 en Oscar Bluemner’s America: Picturing Paterson, New Jersey http://www.patersonday.com/2011/01/08/oscar-bluemner%e2%80%99s-america-picturing-paterson-new-jersey/ http://www.patersonday.com/2011/01/08/oscar-bluemner%e2%80%99s-america-picturing-paterson-new-jersey/#comments Sat, 08 Jan 2011 14:46:42 +0000 admin http://www.patersonday.com/2011/01/08/oscar-bluemner%e2%80%99s-america-picturing-paterson-new-jersey/


Homer and Dolly Hand Art Center, Stetson University, 139 E. Michigan Avenue, DeLand, Florida

Exhibition runs from Jan. 14 – April 29, 2011

Opening reception: Friday, January 14, 6-8 pm.

 

After that date, regular hours will be Mon-Fri 11:00 am – 4:00 pm.  Our galleries are closed on the weekends, and on all national and university holidays.

 

Further information is available by calling Hand Art Center 386-822-7270 or Stetson Art Department 386-822-7266 or by e-mail to seules@stetson.edu

 

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Paterson Great Falls National Historic Park Act http://www.patersonday.com/2009/04/18/paterson-great-falls-national-historic-park-act/ http://www.patersonday.com/2009/04/18/paterson-great-falls-national-historic-park-act/#comments Sat, 18 Apr 2009 20:19:12 +0000 admin http://www.patersonday.com/2009/04/18/paterson-great-falls-national-historic-park-act/ At a ceremony in the East Room of the White House on Monday, President Obama signed into law the Paterson Great Falls National Historical Park Act.  The Paterson Act is part of an omnibus parks and historic preservation bill that the President called one of the most important pieces of natural resource legislation in decades.
 
In urging Congress to pass the bill, Ron Chernow, author of Alexander Hamilton, described the Paterson Great Falls as “not only a spot of spectacular beauty that deserves to be far better known, but one that occupies a place of supreme importance in the annals of American economic history.”  As the nation’s first Secretary of the Treasury, Hamilton founded the City of Paterson to begin implementing his plan to harness the force of the Great Falls—then the nation’s largest waterfall—to power new industries that would secure America’s economic independence. 
 
True to Hamilton’s vision, Paterson became a great manufacturing city.  Its factories produced the first mildew-resistant cotton sailcloth, which went into every ship in the American Navy; the first Colt revolvers; and the first motorized submarine.  Paterson manufactured more locomotives than any city in the nation, and more silk than any city in the world.  Famed products of the plants of Paterson also included the aircraft engines for the first trans-Atlantic flight and for many World War II bombers.
 
The passage of this Act not only honors and preserves Paterson’s past; it will also brighten its future.  One federal agency has ranked Paterson as the most economically distressed city in the United States.  Residents and local community leaders deeply believe that the creation of the national historical park—coupled with preservation and redevelopment of the historic center of the city—will have an enormously positive impact on Paterson’s 175,000 residents.  We now have a once-in-a-generation opportunity to reverse the course of urban decline that Paterson has suffered over the last 50 years.
 
We are poised to move quickly to create a very special national park that will dramatically improve the city’s image and help bring greater prosperity to the park’s environs.  With over $10 million in funding from the State of New Jersey, we helped organize a national competition and selected James Corner and his award-winning landscape architectural firm Field Operations to design the park.  We have com pleted the master plan for the park, and a longer-term plan for restoration and development in the surrounding neighborhoods.
 
The proposed Paterson Great Falls National Park won the praise of many distinguished scholars, historic preservationists, and national environmental organizations that helped secure broad bipartisan support from across the country.  Many of you helped in ways large and small with the passage of this Act, and we will be posting a web page gratefully acknowledging your contributions.
 
Today I want to single out one individual’s unique efforts to make this park a reality.  John Hope Franklin, my professor some years ago at the University of Chicago, had served as chairman of the federal advisory board on Rethinking the National Parks in the 21st Century.  He pointed out that millions of Americans, particularly racial minorities and recent immigrants, feel little or no connection to our National Park System.  John Hope Franklin believed that a park in Paterson—whose founder Alexander Hamilton fervently opposed slavery and was an advoca te for immigrants—would resonate with all Americans, starting with the Latino, African-American, and Muslim-American residents of Paterson.  For this reason, John Hope became a strong supporter of the bill and provided sage counsel all along the way.  Sadly, he died at the age of 94 on the day Congress passed the bill.  John Hope would have been proud to see President Obama sign it into law, creating one of the few urban national parks whose neighbors are largely immigrants and men and women of color whose history is so closely tied with the story of freedom and economic opportunity.
 
At the White House, just before the President signed the bill, Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar spoke about the fact that we are in a time of deep uncertainty and economic pain.  But, he added, “for Americans, moments of crisis are opportunities to rebuild, renew, and restore the places we cherish.”  We thank my friend and teacher John Hope Franklin, and we thank all of you, for creating the opportunity to rebuild, renew, and restore the Great Falls and historic Paterson.
 
Additional background on the Paterson National Park is in this New York Times audio slideshow:
http://select.nytimes.com/packages/html/nyregion/20060212_TOWNS_AUDIOSS/blocker.html
 
With all good wishes,
 
Leonard
 
Leonard A. Zax
Chairman, The Hamilton Partnership

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John Gruntfest, class of ‘64 http://www.patersonday.com/2008/12/10/john-gruntfest-class-of-64/ http://www.patersonday.com/2008/12/10/john-gruntfest-class-of-64/#comments Wed, 10 Dec 2008 21:48:50 +0000 admin http://www.patersonday.com/2008/12/10/john-gruntfest-class-of-64/ We just missed John playing in NYC at The Cell Theatre on November 14, 2008.  John plays alto sax in a group called The Greatest Little Big Band (in the History of the Megaverse).  We will try to follow his tour and let you know where he is playing next.

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Paterson News http://www.patersonday.com/2008/05/12/paterson-day-2009/ http://www.patersonday.com/2008/05/12/paterson-day-2009/#comments Mon, 12 May 2008 19:10:15 +0000 admin http://www.patersonday.com/?p=3  

April 2, 2009
 
Our Towns
  In New Jersey, History Speaks to the Present By PETER APPLEBOME
History is told in many strange ways, and often it isn’t told at all.
But for a reminder of how much politics, strategy and salesmanship can
go into the telling, consider the scene on Monday when President Obama
signed legislation establishing a national park in, of all places,
Paterson, N.J., a faded industrial town that is one of the poorest in
the nation.
This was no small triumph for Paterson; for its congressman and former
mayor, Bill Pascrell Jr.; and for one Leonard Zax, a Paterson native
and lawyer who a few years back took on the role of designated pain in
the butt to push this thing forward.
Reporters deal with people like him all the time, many of them
invested in some cause that is unlikely to see the light of day. That
definitely seemed the case with the proposed Paterson Great Falls
National Historical Park, billed as a way to preserve Alexander
Hamilton’s vision of an industrial America at the Great Falls of the
Passaic River, where every day two billion gallons of water cascade 77
feet to the gorge below. In a draft report, officials said existing
parks covered the themes proposed for Paterson. The Bush
administration, for economic reasons, opposed adding national parks,
and the idea, to the uninitiated, seemed more than a stretch.
Actually, as a resolute cadre of historians pointed out, the idea
wasn’t a stretch at all. And for Mr. Zax, it became a testament not
just to the power of history but to one thing Americans value even
more — home.
“I am what I am because of Paterson,” said Mr. Zax, whose grandparents
settled there in the early 1900s and whose father became a well-known
lawyer. “Paterson matters to me, and the more I talked to residents
and scholars, the more I realized how many of them had affection for
or took inspiration from Paterson and its history.”
As historians including Ron Chernow, Richard Sylla and Richard
Brookhiser have noted, the country’s industrial history began at
Paterson. Looking for a site for America’s first industrial city, his
counterpoint to Thomas Jefferson’s vision of an agrarian America,
Hamilton saw the raging waters of the falls as an energy source and
located his town there. The result, wrote Mr. Chernow, was “this
futuristic city, this model of what America could be.”
Paterson became a city of mills and factories, making everything
Hamilton envisioned: cotton, sailcloth, flax, hemp, paper, nails,
steel, iron, silk and much more. Over time, there was the first Colt
revolver plant and the world’s first motorized submarine.
The falls endure. The factories, almost all shuttered husks, are a sad
reminder of the nation’s industrial past.
The roots of the park effort date to the 1960s, when the city fought
off a proposed highway through the area. The Great Falls were named a
national historical landmark in 1976. Mr. Pascrell proposed a study of
the feasibility of the park in 2001. Over lunch in 2006, he discussed
the project with Mr. Zax, who investigated its chances and then, after
realizing that someone had to be the designated pest and promoter if
it was to happen, took on the job of helping get the proposal through
Congress.
WHEN the proposal finally became law this year, the 35-acre site
became the 391st national park, part of a network that includes great
wildernesses like the Grand Canyon and Yosemite and urban areas like
Lowell National Historical Park in Massachusetts.
Mr. Zax, who since July has been chairman of the Hamilton Partnership,
a nonprofit effort to create the park and related community
development, lined up a broad coalition to make his case. History is
about the past, but it’s about the present, too.
One of the supporters was John Hope Franklin, who died last week and
had been chairman of the federal advisory board that produced a 2001
report, “Rethinking the National Parks for the 21st Century.” He told
Mr. Zax that millions of Americans, particularly members of racial
minorities and recent immigrants, felt little or no connection to our
national park system. He hoped that a park in urban Paterson would
resonate with Americans, starting with the Latino, African-American
and Muslim residents who otherwise might never set foot in a national
park.
And with the nation’s economy sagging and its industrial base in
tatters, a remark Mr. Pascrell made a few years back seems even more
relevant now.
“We have lost our will to make anything,” he said. “A guy or gal who
uses plastic, uses metal, uses wood to create objects is looked down
on. That’s why this is important.”
E-mail: peappl@nytimes.com 

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