Showing posts with label Capital Region Archives Dinner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Capital Region Archives Dinner. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Seventeenth Capital Region Archives Dinner

The Capital Region Archives Dinner Committee, in co-operation with the New York State Archives Partnership Trust and Capital Area Archivists of New York, is proud to present the Seventeenth Annual Capital Region Archives Dinner. It will be held at the historic Gideon Putnam Spa Resort in Saratoga Springs, New York on Thursday October 4, 2012.

The keynote speaker is Dr. Jennifer Dorsey, Director of Siena College’s Center for Revolutionary Era Studies, who will be speaking about draft dodging during the War of 1812. Her talk is based on a larger research project based on the life of tenant farmer George Holcomb and the diary that Holcomb maintained for fifty years in Rensselaer County, New York.

 Each year, the Archives Dinner Committee recognizes individuals who or organizations that have made significant contributions to the preservation and enhancement of local archives as part of our annual celebration. This year we will recognize the Conference on New York State History, the New York State Military Museum and Veterans Research Center, and Town of Queensbury Historian Marilyn Van Dyke.

Tickets for this year's Archives Dinner are $35.00 each, and you have a choice of three entrees:
  • Slow roasted, thyme-rubbed turkey breast with cranberry pan gravy
  • Chef's choice of seafood du jour
  • Vegetable Napoleon in a sauce of fire-roasted tomatoes
I've had the pleasure of dining at the Gideon Putnam -- checking out prospective venues is one of the perks of being an Archives Dinner Committee member -- and I can assure you that the food will be delicious, the ambiance will be pleasing, and the service will be first-rate. 

If you're interested in attending this year's Archives Dinner, the deadline for making reservations is 1 October 2012.  For more information, consult the Archives Dinner Web site.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

2011 Capital Region Archives Dinner

The 16th Annual Capital Region Archives Dinner will be held on Wednesday October 5, 2011 at 6:00 PM.

This year's dinner will be at the storied Jack’s Oyster House in Albany, N.Y. The keynote speakers are Paul and Mary Liz Stewart, founders of the Underground Railroad History Project of the Capital Region (URHPCR). The URHPCR seeks to acknowledge the active Underground Railroad movement in our region, to raise awareness about and stimulate interest in this little recognized and inspiring part of our history, to understand it in its historic context, to encourage the recognition of local historic figures, and to preserve that history.

The cost to attend this year's Archives Dinner is $37.00 per person, payable by check to "Archives Dinner" and mailed to Kathleen Newkirk at 331 Clapper Road, Selkirk NY 12158; other members of the Archives Dinner Committee (l'Archivista included) can also accept your check. Please be sure to indicate your choice of entree: Chicken Tuscan, Herb Encrusted Salmon, or Rigatoni Pomodoro (vegetarian).

If you have any questions about the Archives Dinner, contact Brian Keough (bkeough-at-albany.edu).

The Capital Region Archives Dinner is the annual celebration of our documentary heritage in the greater Capital Region. Each year during Archives Month, the Archives Dinner Committee recognizes individuals and organizations which have advanced the appreciation of our documentary heritage in northeastern N.Y. For more information, please see the Archives Dinner Web site.

Monday, September 13, 2010

2010 Capital Region Archives Dinner

The 15th Annual Capital Region Archives Dinner will be held on Wednesday, October 6, at the Edison Club in Rexford, New York.

Featured speaker Dr. Gerald Zahavi, Professor of History and Director of the Documentary Studies Program at the University at Albany, SUNY, whose work centers upon General Electric's presence in the Capital Region, will discuss Association Island, a summer vacation retreat and conference center that GE owned for half a century and detail how non-textual records can shed light on "the often hidden social and cultural dimensions of economic history." Gerry, who was one of my favorite professors in graduate school, is a first-rate speaker and has always been an ardent supporter of archives and archivists, so I think attendees will be in for a real treat. Moreover, his speech and the venue will complement each other quite nicely: the Edison Club was founded by GE employees.

The cost to attend this year's Archives Dinner is $35.00 per person, payable by check to "Archives Dinner" and mailed to Hon. Kathleen Newkirk at 331 Clapper Road, Selkirk NY 12158.

Please be sure to indicate your choice of entree (or, if you're purchasing more than one ticket, the entree choice of each person in your party): Chicken Marsala, Baked Scrod with Lemon-Wine Sauce, Sirloin of Beef, or Vegetable Lasagna. All meal choices come with oven-roasted red potatoes and glazed carrots and apple dumpling for dessert.

Tickets are also available from Yours Truly and other members of the Archives Dinner Committee.

Please be sure to make a reservation or purchase a ticket from an Archives Dinner Committee member no later than 30 September 2010.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Fourteenth Annual Capital Region Archives Dinner


The Fourteenth Annual Capital Region Archives Dinner wrapped up about half an hour ago. Almost seventy archivists, records managers, local government officials, and their significant others convened at the Franklin Terrace Ballroom in Troy, and we had a great time. I always enjoy catching up with friends who work at other repositories and getting the chance to relax and socialize with my co-workers.

The evening's main speaker, Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist William Kennedy detailed how an assignment from his editor at the Albany Times-Union -- writing a series of feature articles on the history of Albany -- proved to be a defining moment in his creative life. He was a part-time journalist intent upon getting out of Albany and becoming a novelist, but his work on the series took him to the Albany Institute of History and Art, the Albany History Room of the Albany Public Library, and the New York State Library, and he came to realize that his hometown was an infinitely complex and fascinating subject.

Although Kennedy has made use of a wide array of archival sources, he emphasized the particular value of newspaper archives. He asserted that they provide a unique window into the events and preoccupations of the past and noted that even minor details (e.g., a fierce summer storm that took place in the late 1950s) have made their way into his work and affected the course of his narratives. Moreover, in some instances, they are the best available sources about the city's history; when investigating the death of bootlegging gangster Jack "Legs" Diamond, who met his untimely end in an Albany rooming house in 1931, he found it impossible to gain access to relevant federal and state law enforcement records.

In his wondrously titled 1983 history of the city, O Albany! Improbable City of Political Wizards, Fearless Ethnics, Spectacular Aristocrats, Splendid Nobodies and Underrated Scoundrels, Kennedy described himself "as a person whose imagination has become fused with a single place, and in that place finds all the elements that a man ever needs for the life of the soul." Tonight's talk made it plain that he uncovered many of those elements while sifting through the holdings of archives and libraries.

After Kennedy's speech, we honored two area archivists who have made substantial contributions to the community and the profession:
  • Sister Elaine Wheeler, who founded the Daughters of Charity Archives of the Northeast Province and served as a role model and inspiration for countless other archivists within the Daughters of Charity and other religious orders. Sister Elaine was in her mid-eighties when I first met her, and, like everyone else, I was deeply impressed by her boundless energy and her devotion to her order and its archives.
  • My former colleague Bob Arnold, who, among many other things, established the City of Albany and Albany County's joint archival program and headed the Government Records Services bureau at the New York State Archives. Bob's now teaching New York State history at an area college and is devoting a lot of time to lecturing and writing about archives and New York State history.

The evening ended with a surprise award to my colleague Andy Raymond, who during a 1995 breakfast meeting with Kathy Newkirk, the Bethlehem Town Clerk, and Kathy Sickler, then the Guilderland Town Clerk, first floated the idea of having a formal dinner for records professionals in the Albany area. Fourteen years later, Andy's idea is still going strong: the Archives Dinner Committee is already starting to talk about the fifteenth dinner! Kathy Newkirk, who has chaired or co-chaired the Archives Dinner since its inception, and Kathy Sickler presented him with a commemorative brass bell.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

2009 Capital Region Archives Dinner

Save the date: the Fourteenth Annual Capital Region Archives Dinner will be held at at the Franklin Terrace Ballroom in Troy, New York on Thursday, 8 October 2009.

The keynote speaker is award-winning author and journalist William Kennedy, known for his “Albany Cycle” of seven novels, one of which (Ironweed) received the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1984 and in 1987 was made into the film of the same name starring Jack Nicholson and Meryl Streep.

Ever since his days as a journalist for the Albany Times Union in the early 1960s, Kennedy has been greatly influenced by documents found in archives and has blended history and memory to create a vivid Albany of the imagination. His archival research is also reflected in his deeply personal (and, IMHO, sublimely titled) history of the city, O Albany! Improbable City of Political Wizards, Fearless Ethnics, Spectacular Aristocrats, Splendid Nobodies, and Underrated Scoundrels.

Information about tickets will soon appear on the Archives Dinner Web site. Ticket requests can also be made to Hon. Kathleen A. Newkirk, Bethlehem Town Clerk, 445 Delaware Avenue, Delmar, NY 12054, 518-439-4955, extension 1183, or knewkirk[at]townofbethlehem.org.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Capital Region Archives Dinner

The Thirteenth Annual Capital Region Archives Dinner, which may well be the longest-running event of its type in the nation, was held tonight at the lovely Mansion at Cedar Hill in Selkirk, NY.

The Archives Dinner allows archivists, records managers, and archival allies in the Albany-Schenectady-Troy area to kick back, enjoy some good food and good company, and honor folks who have made significant contributions to the archival community or raised awareness of historical records. I got to see all kinds of people I wish I could see more often, including but not limited to:
Of course, lots and lots of folks from the New York State Archives were there, too. I interact with 'em five days a week, but I love seeing them in an informal setting and getting to chat with all their significant others.

Susan D'Entremont, the Capital Region's DHP Regional Archivist, junior co-chair of the Archives Dinner Committee, and another person I would like to see more often, got the evening off to a rollicking good start, and the State Archives' Ray LaFever did his usual bang-up job as MC.

We have a speaker at each Archives Dinner, and William T. "Chip" Reynolds delivered a great presentation. Chip is the captain of the Half Moon, a full-scale and fully operational replica of the ship that in 1609 Henry Hudson sailed up the river that now bears his name. (As you might expect, 2009 is going to be a big deal in New York State--it's the 400th anniversary of the voyages of Hudson and Samuel de Champlain and the 200th anniversary of Robert Fulton's first steamship voyage up the Hudson River--so Chip's presentation was very apropos.)

Chip started out as a scientist studying changes in reef formations, and his presentation drove home the ways in which archival materials shed light on not only human history but natural history--in his former career, he made heavy use of survey records held by the National Archives when studying reefs. Using a number of late sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century maps as examples, he then detailed how they document the emergence of empirical ways of understanding the world and the findings of successive explorers.

The bulk of Chip's presentation highlighted the centrality of archival records such as the original ship's log to the operations of the replica ship, which has an educational mission. Groups of middle schoolers spend one-week stints on the ship and are responsible for sailing the ship, using replicas of seventeenth-century instruments to measure the ship's speed, course, etc., and keeping records of the ship's operations. In some areas of the Hudson, they use fascimiles of early seventeenth-century maps to navigate the ship--in sections of the river that haven't been extensively altered by dredging, etc., some maps that were created over three hundred years ago remain extremely accurate. When they're not sailing the ship, they perform scientific experiments--gathering and testing water samples, etc.--and document their findings.

I'm working from memory, and I know I'm not doing justice to Chip's presentation or the Half Moon itself. Chip and his colleagues have developed a fantastic program, and they compel students to apply their knowledge of history, mathematics, and science to a host of real-world problems and scenarios--and to understand the importance of drawing upon existing records and creating new ones that document their findings. A good friend of mine regularly crews on the Half Moon, and I can see why he keeps going back year after year.

Chip also imparted one fascinating fact that was totally new to me: the first European to take up permanent residence in New Netherland was one Jan Rodrigues, who in 1613 opted to settle on Manhattan. Rodrigues is referred to as "the Moor" in the records, indicating that, in all likelihood, at least some of his forebears were of African descent. Rodrigues was a free man, and he freely chose to settle in New Netherland and live among the Native Americans--something that Chip's African-American students find surprising and inspiring.

After Chip's speech ended, we gave awards to Jan Allen, who could not attend the Archives Dinner due to illness but has helped to develop all sorts of curricula that make use of archival materials and has tirelessly championed student use of historical records, and to Gerry Zahavi. Gerry is a true friend of archives: he's helped find archival homes for the papers of labor activist Helen Quirini and folklorist Norman Studer, the records of IUE Local 301, and other important collections, he ensures that his oral history interviews and those of his students are held by repositories, and he takes great pains to make his students aware of the riches that await them in archives.

Gerry said something really striking when he received his award: whenever people ask him what his favorite book or article is, he doesn't know how to answer because he finds archival records so much more interesting than monographs and journal articles. All of his favorite readings are primary sources.

The evening sort of wound down after the awards were given out, but I stayed a little while longer and talked to Gerry, Chip, and some State Archives folks. It was a great evening.

And if you're in the Albany area and are looking for a banquet facility . . . the Mansion at Cedar Hill lacks a Web site but has plenty of historic ambiance--a 19th-century governor of New York lived here, the gangster/bootlegger Legs Diamond spent a little time at the place, and it served as an Elks Lodge for a time. It's quaint, the owner's great, and so is the food; having feasted on superb egglant Napoleon and pumpkin cake tonight, I hope that that the Mansion at Cedar Hill evolves into a full-fledged restaurant!