Monday, March 14, 2011

Orange County History Conference

Orange County History Conference

Date:        April 16, 2011
Location:   Albert Wisner Public Library
                One Mcfarland Dr.
                Warwick NY 10990
                (845)-986-1047
Time:        9:00-5:00
Fee:         free ($10 for lunch,  Make check payable to IHARE and mail to;
                IHARE, PO Box 41, Purchase, NY 10577)
Cutoff Date:    April 9, 2011

Immerse yourself in the history of Orange County.  Look at the landscape the people first walked. Gaze in awe at the mammoth beasts they encountered and whose discovery influenced a nation only a few decades after so many died in the fight for independence.  Hear its music.  Tell its stories.  See its historic sites. Learn about the Orange people who over the centuries have made the county what it is today.  Meet the people who are preserving that legacy and help us to continue to do so in the 21st century.

9:00    Orange County Executive Edward Diana [invited]

9:15    After the Ice Age: Life Returns to Orange County
          Tom Lake,  NYSDEC Hudson River Estuary Program Naturalist
  
Once upon a time millennia ago, Orange County was a sheet of ice just as it was this winter only more so.  The Ice Age created the landscape on which human settlement would occur.  This talk will examine Orange County in the Late Pleistocene, from the end of the Ice Age through the arrival of the First Americans (ca. 15,000-10,000 years ago) through the material remains which still exist today.
 
Tom Lake works for the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation’s Hudson River Estuary Program as its Estuary Naturalist, where he shadows eagles, teaches the ecology of the estuary, and edits the Hudson River Almanac, a natural history journal now in its 18th year

10:15    Immigrants All: The Immigration Dimension in Orange County History
            Richard Hull, New York University, Warwick Town Historian

Orange County is a culturally diverse entity. In some respects it is a melting pot and in others it is deeply divided and fractured along cultural, religious, and ethnic lines. This talk traces the origins of the major cultural and religious groups that settled here, from the pre-Columbian period to the present. We explore their distant origins, the conditions that motivated them to come here from their ancestral homelands, the ways in which they adapted to their new surroundings, the extent to which they acquired new cultural identities, the problems they encountered in their process of assimilation. Some immigrant groups sought to adapt while others resisted. How do we account for these differences in acculturation? How did the earlier populations react to newcomers? What is the demographic future?

Professor Richard Hull teaches at New York University where he has been honored with the Distinguished Teaching Award.  He has received a Fulbright Fellow, Danforth Fellow and the United Nations Distinguished Citizen Award.  Locally, he is the Town of Warwick historian, the recipient of the Orange County Revered Citizens Award in 2005, a Trustee Emeritus of the, Orange County Land Trust, a charter trustee of the Sugarloaf Community Foundation, a Board member emeritus of The Nature Conservancy, on the Advisory Board of the Warwick Conservancy, and Trustee emeritus of the Sugar Loaf Methodist Church.  He is the author of numerous books including: People of the Valleys: A History of Warwick, 1700-2005.

11:15    So Many Brave Men: A History of the Battle at Minisink Ford
            Peter Osborne, former Executive Director, Minisink Valley Historical Society

On July 22, 1779, one of the most lethal battles of the American Revolution based on the ratio of participants to people killed, occurred on a hill above Minisink Ford, New York, along the Delaware River north of Port Jervis.  The battle was a disaster for the American militia units with more than one-third of the militiamen perishing in that conflict.  The primary source documents tell the tale of the lives of these men from the surrounding areas, of the battles they fought, and of their dedication to freedom.  These previously overlooked documents served as the basis for the book on the battle.

Peter Osborne presently is the Curator of Education and Special Events for the Red Mill Museum Village in Clinton.  Prior to that he was the Executive Director for 29 years of the Minisink Valley Historical Society in Port Jervis.  He has a decree in American History from Rutgers University and an interest in regional history and the Roosevelts.  He is the co-author of So Many Brave Men: A History of the Battle at Minisink Ford. 

12:15    Lunch with entertainment by the Hudson River Ramblers, Jonathan Kruk and Rich Bala

1:15    The Mastodons in Orange County: Then and Now
    The Great Orange County Mastodon Discovery of 1801: Meaning for America
    Joseph Devine

There once was a time when Europe was considered the most cultured of civilizations and America was a mere neophyte lacking the classical consciousness of a mature civilizations.  But America had wonders Europe couldn’t dream of from the spectacular Niagara Falls to skeletal remains of when giants beasts roamed the land. The discoveries in Orange County astonished the world and impacted our infant republic.  Hear this story and see what was discovered.

Joseph Devine is a retired IBM Senior Technical Professional who has dedicated recent years toward research in the field of local and American history.

    Introduction to the Peale Museum of Discovery - Evan Galbraith

Evan Galbraith manages a family office, developing real estate properties throughout Orange County. The famous Montgomery Pond, where Charles Willson Peale exhumed mastodon bones, was bought by the family in the 1960s.  In 2007, the family decided to explore the development of a museum to celebrate this incredible part of our national heritage.

Evan has a B.A. from Tufts University in Boston and a M.B.A. from Columbia Business School in New York.
 
2:15    Preserving the Past

    Filming the Past: History of the Palisades Parks
    Timothy J. Englert, Development Specialist
    Palisades Interstate Park Commission

"The Perkins Effect" and "The Harriman Touch", two short films by PIPC Media on the history of the Palisades Parks, from its beginnings more than a hundred years ago to its current success amidst economic uncertainty. There will be a discussion about the PIPC's treasure trove of archival materials, park preservation, and the films themselves following the screening.

PIPC Development Specialist Timothy Englert has been with the PIPC since 2007, and has worked to promote its history, write successful grants, publicize its 28 state parks and historic sites, and develop its substantial archives into films and other media. He is the co-founder of the Knickerbocker Ice Festival, which celebrates the history of the Hudson Valley's world famous natural ice harvesting past, and has seen it grow from a handful of attendees in its first year to over 25,000 this past January. Prior to the PIPC, Tim's career as a filmmaker included work in both television and the corporate world in New York and Los Angeles, as well as the commercial photography business in NYC. He graduated from Kenyon College with a degree in history, and was awarded a Thomas J. Watson Fellowship studying the history and construction of the acoustic guitar. He lives in Valley Cottage, NY.

    Historic Preservation: Tool for a 21st Century Community
    Julian Adams, New York State Historic Preservation Office

Historic Preservation has long roots in American History, although many seem to think it is a modern idea.  Learn where the historic preservation movement began in the United States, how it developed philosophically and in practice, and what local communities and citizens can do to be a part of maintaining their character and sense of place.

Julian Adams is the Community Liaison and Certified Local Government Coordinator for the New York State Historic Preservation Office (SHPO), part of the Office of Parks, Recreation, and Historic Preservation (OPRHP).  A native of Georgia, he holds a Masters of Historic Preservation from the University of Georgia at Athens.  He started New York State service in 1988, when he took a job in the SHPO’s Technical Services Unit, overseeing rehabilitations and restorations across New York State under federal and state programs.  During a sabbatical from the SHPO in 1995-1996, he worked with the Historic Natchez Foundation in Natchez Mississippi, overseeing low income housing development in historic neighborhoods, working with the local preservation commission and planning department, and assisting in heritage education.  In 2000 he was named head of the Technical Services Unit, overseeing all rehabilitations and restorations across New York State, a position he held until 2004.  In 2005 he took a position as Sr. Architectural Historian/Historic Preservation Specialist with a nation-wide environmental consulting firm based in Dallas, Texas, working with military bases in their responsibilities under Federal Historic Preservation law.  He returned to state service in 2006 as Community Liaison, Certified Local Government Coordinator, and OPRHP Agency Preservation Officer, assisting communities and municipalities across New York State with their preservation issues.   

    Orange County History Webguide: History at Your Fingertips
    Sue Gardner, Town of Warwick Deputy Historian, Warwick Historical
    Society Archivist, and Local History Librarian, Albert Wisner Public
    Library Warwick

3:45    Orange County School/Historic Organization Collaborations
    Peter Feinman, Institute of History, Archaeology, and Education 

    Creating a Curriculum: The Museum Village/Newburgh CSD Collaboration
    Sarah Wassberg, Education Director, Museum Village

    Traveling Trunk: Reaching Out When They Can’t Bus In
    Ivy Tulin, Historical Society of Warwick

    Bringing the Civil War to a Fifth Grade Classroom
    Jim Meaney, Civil War Living Historian 

4:45    Teaching Orange County History Workshop,
    Peter Feinman ,Institute of History, Archaeology, and Education, 

SAVE THE DATES
3/19     Hudson Valley History Conference -  Mahopac Library
4/16     Hudson Valley History Conference -  Warwick Library
4/30     Hudson Valley History Conference -  Catskill High School
5/7     Hudson Valley History Conference -  Dutchess Community College
5/14     Hudson Valley History Conference -  BOCES, Port Ewen
6/28-7/3 Winning the War, Winning the Peace: A Field Study of the American Revolution Teacherhostel - West Point to Saratoga
7/18-22  MOHAWK VALLEY Teacherhostel
9/10     Hudson Valley History Conference  - Rockland TBD

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

“The Civil War – An Artist’s Perspective”, by member Kevin Storms

An Artist’s Perspective on the Civil War
Commemorates Sesquicentennial at
Ellenville’s Gallery Link
 Ellenville, NY: Ellenville’s Gallery Link proudly presents “The Civil War – An Artist’s Perspective”, an exhibition of multi-media works by Pine Bush artist Kevin Storms. The show is part of Ellenville Public Library & Museum’s 2011Civil War Sesquicentennial programming, and will be on display from March 2ndthrough April 27th, 2011.  “We’re really excited about this installation of Kevin Storms’ work,” said Community Relations Coordinator for the library, Asha Golliher.  “Kevin is not only a dedicated artist, but his portrayal of people who fought in and were affected by the Civil War, along with his Civil War scenes, really touch us and remind us of the very human side of this pivotal moment in our nation’s history.”
 Kevin’s artwork is a reflection of his travels, from water fowling marshes to Civil War battlefields. He takes a deeply personal interest in everything he paints. One especially poignant example of this is the painting, “The Battle at Walnut Mountain”, based on an annual re-enactment that takes place in Liberty, NY. Kevin played the part of a Civil War Correspondent, (who represented the war through illustration) and was moved by his experience to create this work.
       
The natural world and American history are infinite wells into which he reaches for insight and motivation. Kevin feels that the creation of art is a way to understand life and history, as well as a way to communicate that understanding.  This is especially true of his Civil War images; whether a still life, landscape or visual rendering of a local hero, his works bring us into intimate contact with the war, offering us insight and greater self-knowledge.

Kevin demonstrated artistic talent at a young age, and was encouraged to become an artist. An avid student of both American and natural history, these subjects became the focus of his artwork, and a lifelong passion. Kevin found that his hunting and fishing experiences also strongly influenced his art.  Kevin met master Wildlife Artist John Hamberger, and became his student. It was under Hamberger’s tutelage that he learned the valuable lesson of “going to the source” and studying a subject matter “in real life”. The study of classical artworks by the masters was also an important part of his training.

Following the path of earlier sporting artists, the pursuit of game and the natural world became profound sources of inspiration and deeply integrated with his creative expression. Recently, he has begun to explore abstract art as a new venture in self expression. Several of these abstract pieces are included in the Gallery Link exhibition.

Past exhibitions of Kevin’s work include: Windham Civil War Music and Art Heritage Festival;  Ashokan Center Civil War Days;  Greene County Arts Council;  Orange County Government Center;  Orange County 1841 Historic Court House;  New City Public Library;  Orange County Community College;  North Jersey Highlands Historical Conference;  Middletown, NY Veterans’ Center; Gettysburg History Meets the Arts Festival, Gettysburg, PA; The Gettysburg Historical Art Gallery, and The Civil War Fine Art Gallery, both in Gettysburg, PA; The Lincoln Society, Peekskill, NY; The Ulster County Civil War Round Table meeting, Kingston, NY; New York State Archaeological Association Annual Meeting. 

There will be an Artist’s Reception at The Gallery Link for Kevin Storms and “The Civil War – An Artist’s Perspective” on Saturday, April 16th, from 11:30am-1:30pm.  The reception will be immediately following “Civil War Wives” a presentation by author and historian Carol Berkin scheduled for 10:00am in the library’s Community Room. The public is most cordially invited to attend.  

The Gallery Link is located in Ellenville Public Library & Museum, 40 Center Street, Ellenville, NY, 12428, and is open during library hours. For more information, please call (845)647-5530 or go towww.eplm.org.  



Lynne "Asha" Golliher
Community Relations Specialist
Ellenville Public Library & Museum
Ellenville, NY  12428
(845)647-1497
Serving residents in the Ellenville School District and the Towns of Wawarsing and Rochester - we're your public library!

Friday, March 4, 2011

Ed Lenik speaking on "AMERICAN INDIAN ROCK ART ON THE SUSQUEHANNA RIVER" in Waverly, NY at 2pm on Saturday, April 30th.

"AMERICAN INDIAN ROCK ART ON THE SUSQUEHANNA RIVER," will be presented by archaeologist, rock art specialist, nationally recognized author and Orange County Chapter memberEd Lenik at the Susquehanna River Archaeological Center (SRAC) at 345 Broad Street Waverly, NY at 2pm on Saturday, April 30th.


In the last half of the nineteenth century, petroglyphs were discovered on several small islands within the lower Susquehanna River in Pennsylvania and Maryland. Three petroglyph sites occur near Safe Harbor in Lancaster County: one on Walnut Island upriver from the Safe Harbor Hydroelectric Dam, a second group on Cresswell Rock a mile and one-half up river from Walnut Island, and a third group on Big and Little Indian Rocks and other smaller rocks below the dam. In Maryland about three miles below the Pennsylvania state line, the Bald Friar petroglyphs were located on several small islands in the river. Three distinct styles of images occur within these sites.

The Walnut Island, Cresswell Rock and Bald Friar petroglyph sites are now submerged under lakes created by the Safe Harbor and Conowingo Hydroelectric Dams. The petroglyphs below Safe Harbor Dam are extant. Beginning in the 1860s and continuing into the twentieth century several efforts were made by several researchers to record the glyphs and salvage specimens of the carvings. This presentation will illustrate the various images at these four sites, trace their history and suggest an interpretation of the origin and meaning.

General admission will be $6, SRAC members and students $4 which will include free admission to the SRAC exhibit hall. For more information, visithttp://www.spanishhill.com.

Deb Twigg
Executive Director
Susquehanna River Archaeological Center (SRAC)
P.O. Box 12
Sayre, PA 18840
www.SRACenter.org
H - (607)565-2536
C - (607)727-3111

Thursday, February 24, 2011

THE ARCHAEOLOGIST, Vol. 3, March 18, 2011 excerpts

THE ARCHAEOLOGIST
THE INCORPORATED ORANGE COUNTY CHAPTER
OF THE NEW YORK STATE ARCHAEOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION
60 Decker Drive, Middletown, N.Y. 10940
Vol. 3, March 18, 2011
  
Chapter Web Site -  http://ioccnysaa.blogspot.com/
Chapter email - ioccnysaa@gmail.com

Chapter meetings are held on the third Friday of each month except July and August at the Methodist Church in Goshen, which is located on the corner of Main Street and Court Lane. All are welcome.

** Meeting Notice: The March meeting will be held on Friday the 18th, at 7:30 P.M. Barry Kass will present “Ancient Civilizations of Greece”.

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President’s Message:  
             It was nice to get back to the chapter meeting in February. During the meeting I described a shaman’s ritual that I witnessed in the Paramo of the Peruvian northern Andes. I suggested we should adapt this ritual to attract new members and make our chapter even more interesting. However no one seemed to be interested in participating since it included inhaling raw tobacco juice through your nose, climbing a high mountain and jumping into an ice cold lake. During my travels I will continue to look for other suggestions.

            We have another busy spring season planned and I hope all of you can join us at these events which include the Florist site, Foxwoods Pequot Museum, Dutchess Rock Shelter and monthly meetings.

            Priscilla and I will be in Germany and the Czech Republic during the month of March. Therefore our vice-president, Check Tudor, will conduct the meeting.

During this trip I will be working with the Maria Reiche Institute of Germany and the Czech Astronomical Institute Academy of Science. We will be merging our data bases into one format which we hope will help us find additional correlations between geological features, aquifers, archaeological sites, astronomical events and geoglyphs worldwide. I am sure combining our data bases will give us greater insight into the ancient past.
Dave
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Dutchess Rock Shelter Day
            We will be planning a day at the Dutchess Rock Shelter. Clif suggested we invite local teachers this year and we all agreed this is an excellent idea since the Native American is included in the 4th grade curriculum. We hope to have the date set by the next meeting. Gary Keeton has offered to chair this event. He will need help with the planning as well as people to guide and direct people at the site. If you are interested in assisting please contact Gary directly, or email ioccnysaa@gmail.com.

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Foxwoods Pequot Native American Museum
            We are planning to go to Foxwoods on Saturday, April 30th. Since a bus is not available we will be car pooling. At this point in time we have 12 people signed up and 4 vehicles. If anyone else would like to go please contact Clif or email ioccnysaa@gmail.com by April 1st. If we have 20 people we may be able to get a “behind the scenes” tour of the museum. We need to book this at least four weeks in advance; therefore April first is our deadline.


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Florist site

            Stephanie will be returning to the Florist Site as soon as the snow melts and the ground thaws. She will be sending out information regarding dates and time. If you have any questions please contact Stephanie, or email ioccnysaa@gmail.com.
             This site provides all our members a wonderful opportunity to experience archaeology first hand. We hope all of our members can take advantage of this opportunity to develop their skills as archeologists. If you are new to the chapter here is your opportunity to participate in an archaeological investigation and learn the techniques needed to properly document a site.


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           It is time to collect dues for 2011. Please send your payment to Clif Patrick at 119 Brookside Ave, Chester, NY 10918 as soon as possible along with your correct mailing address in order to receive your copy of the Bulletin. Please make checks out to IOOCNYSAA; $25 for individual, $35 for dual.

When Ray returns from Florida, he'll resume collecting the dues.



Saturday, February 19, 2011

Paramo by David Johnson. 2011-02-18

David Johnson gave a very interesting and lively talk on his recent expedition to document the flora and fauna of the The Sacred Paramo – Sacred High Andes Wetlands.  These wetlands are high in the Andes, a four hour horse ride from the nearest settlement, above the tree line, under the converging currents of moist warm air from the Amazon and the cold dry air coming off the Pacific. The result is nearly continuous rainfall in the wet season. In the dry season when Dave explored it, it only rains - pours - a third of each day. Under the near permanent cloud cover, pictured, this  is a cold wet wetland with many undocumented species. So dense was the cloud cover, that Dave often had to use a flash during midday to take photos. 
He was also privileged to document a ceremony at the one of the most sacred highland lakes, Luna Rae, changed but slightly over thousands of years, purifying body and soul in paying homage to the these deities.

 Shaman at Luna Rae.
 Dave also brought these objects, typical of the offerings thrown into these scared lakes during these ceremonies. So remote and sacred are these lakes, that looters have avoided desecrating them, so far.

 Barry and Richard examining a few of David's Andean artifacts.
 David's beautifully decorated jacket is from the Capachica Culture who live on the Cahachica peninsula in Lake Titicaca. The flowers on the jacket are representative of high alpine environments. Lake Titicaca is roughly 300 miles downrange from the Paramo.


Recent discoveries of valuable minerals and the threat of large scale mining now pose a serious risk to The Sacred Paramo!


Friday, February 4, 2011

Call for Papers: Gordon C. Deangelo Memorial Symposium


 VAN EPPS-HARTLEY CHAPTER 
NEW YORK STATE ARCHAEOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION 
95TH ANNUAL MEETING 
JOHNSTOWN, NEW YORK, HOLIDAY INN 
GORDON C. DEANGELO MEMORIAL SYMPOSIUM: 
THE INTERFACE BETWEEN AVOCATIONAL AND PROFESSIONAL ARCHAEOLOGISTS 
SATURDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 16, 2011 
CALL FOR PAPERS 
The Gordon C. DeAngelo Symposium Committee is pleased to announce a Symposium in Gordon’s honor. The symposium will focus on the interface between the avocational and the professional archaeologist. This is a topic that was very important to Gordon and upon which he contributed an article to the Robert Funk Festschrift. Gordon’s life so wonderfully exemplifies someone who startled the sometimes deep divide as he made significant contributions to archaeology. Papers should focus on exploring the interface between avocationals and professionals, and the many contributions that Gordon made as he devoted his life to helping all of us.

Abstracts should be submitted in MS Word and emailed to both Peter Pratt (peter-pratt@twcny.rr.com) and David Starbuck (dstarbuck@frontiernet.net) or sent as a hard copy to each. The deadline for submissions is February 15, 2011. We will forward the abstracts to Wayne Lenig to include in the meeting program. Please include your Chapter(s) or At-Large affiliation with your abstract. A-V materials can be in either 35mm slides or PowerPoint (since some of the illustrations may be understandably before PowerPoint). PowerPoint presentations should be forwarded via email to Program chair Wayne Lenig (wlenig@yahoo.com) by April 1, 2011 so that they can be preloaded and ready for presentation.

Links to additional materials:

Chapter Newsletter: Vol. 2, February 18, 2011 excerpts

THE ARCHAEOLOGIST
THE INCORPORATED ORANGE COUNTY CHAPTER
OF THE NEW YORK STATE ARCHAEOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION
60 Decker Drive, Middletown, N.Y. 10940
Vol. 2, February 18, 2011



Chapter meetings are held on the third Friday of each month except July and August at the Methodist Church in Goshen, which is located on the corner of Main Street and Court Lane. All are welcome.

** Meeting Notice: The February meeting will be held on Friday the 18th, at 7:30 P.M. David Johnson will present a program on his research in the sacred Peruvian wetlands of the Andes Mountains known as the Paramo.

***********************************
President’s Message:  

            I was glad to hear that the January meeting went well and I look forward to seeing everyone at our February meeting. The Astroarchaeological conference that I attended in Lima, Peru in early January was very interesting and I will never look at an archaeological site the same way again. Researchers from all over the world reported on astronomical alignments of sites from the largest to the smallest. I couldn’t help but think about what we are missing in our surveys regarding pre Columbian sites in this area. Ironically several of the presentations commented on the association of viewing sites for astronomical alignments with groundwater sources. This is exactly what my presentation was about and it resulted in a lot of interest in my research. The conference chairman said they were thinking of posting the presentation on a website. If they do I will let you know. Over all it was the best conference I have ever attended.

            As I mentioned before I hope you can attend this meeting. In addition to discussing the “Andean Tradition” and how ancient tradition is still alive within the lifestyle of many Andean cultures I will also present a wonderful way to attract new members based on the Andean tradition. I hope to see you on the 18th.
Dave

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 Foxwoods Pequot Native American Museum
             The trip to Foxwoods is planned for Saturday, April 30th. So put the date on your calendar and your name on the signup sheet if you intend to go. We will be car pooling so we will need volunteers to drive. Details will follow as we near the date.


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 March 18, 2011 - Monthly Meeting - Barry Kass will be speaking on ancient Greek civilizations. He visited several sites with his students and some of our chapter members last spring.

April 15th, 2011 – We will offer flint knapping under the expert leadership of Gary Sipila and Joe Mlcoch. If you have a flint knapping kit get it out and dust it off. Here is your chance improve your skills.

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IOOCNYSAA Meeting Minutes – January 21, 2011

            The January meeting of the IOOCNYSAA was called to order at 7:37 PM by Chuck Tudor, vice-president, in the absence of Dave Johnson, president. He welcomed all present and asked the guests to introduce themselves and how they learned about the meeting. Most had read the notice in the paper and were interested in the presentation on Iona Island.

            In the absence of our treasurer, Ray Decker, Clif Patrick stated that there had been no transactions since the last meeting.  Teri Caruso moved to accept the report with Jon Leonard seconding.

            Clif Patrick moved that we accept the secretary’s report as mailed out with Gary Keeton seconding.

            Members were reminded that the Florist site is closed until spring.  We will be working there on Sunday mornings until about 1 PM once the weather is conducive to being outside. Stephanie Tice will again be coordinating the activity.

            The Christmas party held in December was enjoyed by all those attending.

We will be hosting the 2012 annual state meeting here in the Orange County area. We need volunteers to work on the various committees: set-up, tear down, registration, reception table, Dutchess Quarry tour.  We all need to give our time to this to ensure the success of the meeting.  We are still looking for a location.  If anyone has an idea, please let Dave or one of the executive committee know.

We did not hold the symposium this year.  If anyone is interested in helping to organize one let Dave know.

Fred Assmus reported that the state organization is changing the way chapter awards will be presented at the state meeting. Now they will be handed out during the day on Saturday and recipients will need to be present to receive them.

The state meeting will be sponsored by the Van Epps-Hartley Chapter in Johnstown from April 15-17.  The Pennsylvania meeting will be held on April 8-10, 2011.


The state publication The Archaeology of Long Island is available from the state or from Fred Assmus at a cost of $10 for members and $15 for non-members plus $2 for postage.  He also told us about a paper by Joseph Gingerich to be published in American Antiquities regarding a study by Temple University of subsistence remains found on the Shannee-Minisink site near Stroudsburg, PA. 

Please note:  Membership dues are now due - $25 for single and $35 for dual. Student and junior memberships are also available. They can be sent to Clif Patrick, who is assuming the treasurer’s responsibilities until Ray returns from Florida. His address is 119 Brookside Ave., Chester, NY  10918.

The motion to adjourn was made by Clif and seconded by Bill Scott.

The 50/50 winner was Priscilla Johnson.

The program on Iona Island was presented by Donald (Doc) Baynes.