Extensions of Remarks 11947

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Extensions of Remarks 11947 April 29, 1976 EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS 11947 of such survelllance for 24 hours in the ab­ H.R. 13125. April 8, 1976. International Re­ H.R. 13130. April 8, 1976. Government Op­ sence of a. judicial order. lations; Interstate a.nd Foreign Commerce. erations. Establ!shes the Department of Requires the Chief Justice of the United. Amends the Export Administration Act of Education within the executive branch of States to designate seven district court 1969 to make it the policy of the United the Federal Government to take over speci­ judges to hear applications for, and grant or­ States to oppose restrictive trade practices fied functions of the Department of Health, ders approving, electronic survellla.nce any­ or boycotts imposed by foreign countries Education, and Welfare and ell of the func­ where within the United States. against any domestic concern of the United tions of the United States Office of Educa­ H.R. 13121. April 8, 1976. District of Colum­ States. Amends the Securities Exchange Act tion. bia.. Requires that, after publication of the of 1934 by imposing additional disclosure Establishes the Federal Interagency Com­ fifth annual cumulative supplement to the requirements on any investor who proposes mittee on Education to coordinate all Fed­ 1973 edition of the District of Columbia. to acquire more than 5 percent of the equity eral programs affecting education. Code, new editions and supplements of such securities of any United States company. H.R. 13131. April 8, 1976. Judicinry. code be prepared and published under the H.R. 13126. April 8, 1976. Education and Amends the Clayton Act to require specified direction of the Council of the District of Labor. Amends the Higher Education Act of classes of persons to notify the Federal Columbia. rather than under the Office of the 1965 to direct the Commlssioner of Educa­ Trade Commission and the Justice Depart­ Law Revision Counsel in the House or Repre­ tion to institute a system of reduced-interest ment of certain contemplated mergers prior sentatives. loans to students in institutions of higher to acquisition. H.R. 13122. AprilS, 1976. Judiciary. Amends education, and to provide for a. system of H.R. 13132. April 8, 1976. Interstate and the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets income-contingent repayment thereof. Foreign Commerce. Amends the Federal Act of 1968 to increase assistance to State H.R. 13127. April 8, 1976. Ways and Means. Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act to require programs designed to accelerate the disposi­ Authorizes any individual who has attained disclosure on food package labels of the tion of criminal cases and to State programs the age of 65 to take a nonrefundable tax portion of the weight of the food which is to improve juvenile justice and prevent ju­ credit, under the Internal Revenu ~ Code, sugar in instances where sugar constitutes venile crime. for a. percentage of the amount of real prop­ ten percent or more of the total number of Establishes within the Law Enforcement erty taxes or rent constituting real property calories in the food. Assistance Administration the Office for taxes paid or accrued by the taxpayer during H.R. 13133. April 8, 1976. Publ!c Works Speedy Trial Assistance to aid States in ex­ the taxable year. and Transportation. Amends the Federal pediting the criminal justice process. Estab­ H.R. 13128. April 8, 1976. Government Op­ Aviation Act of 1958 to prohibit, except for lishes within the Administration the Office erations; Rules. Abolishes specified Federal emergency purposes, the entrance into or of Corrections to aid States in improving cor­ regulatory agencies on July 4, 1976, unless operation within the United States of any rectional factllties, programs, and practices. Congress and the President approve their civil supersonic aircraft engaged in com­ H.R. 13123. Aoril 8. 1976. Public Works and con+•nuatlon. Sets limits on the continue1 mercial service which generates noise in Transportation: Authorizes the Secretary of existence of Federal regulatory agencies. Srts excess of the level prescribed for new sub­ Commerce to make grants for local public forth the procedures to be followed by the sonic aircraft. works projects, provided that such projects President to transfer the functions, powers, H.R. 13134. April 8, 1976. Judiciary. Sub­ are designed to alleviate unemployment and and duties of terminated agencies to himself jects any parent who kidnaps his or her do not involve the damming or other diver­ or to a successor agency. · minor child to a fine of not more than $1,000, sion of water. H.R. 13129. April 8, 1976. Judiciary. imnrisonment for not more than one year, H.R. 13124. April 8, 1976. Interstate and Amends the Omnibus Crime Control and or both. Foreign Commerce; Public Works and Trans­ Safe Streets Act of 1968 to emphasize crime H.R. 13135. April 8, 1976. Merchant Marine portation. Amends the Hazardous Materials prevention as a major purpose of Title I of and Fishries. Provides that for purposes of Transportation Act to require registration such Act. Requires that States applying for the Federal Boat Safety Act of 1971, the with the Secretary of Transportation when Federal crime prevention, law enforcement, following waters lying entirely within the transporting "hazardous" as well as "ex­ and criminal justice grants under such Act State of New Hampshire are declared non­ tremely hazardous" materials. Revises the include in their required comprehensive navigable: Lake Winnisquam, Lake Winne­ responsibility for safety precautions, and plans a program for the prevention of crime pesaukee, and specified portions of the MPr­ authorizes appropriations under such Act. against the elderly. rimack River. EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS HACKER FINDS FORTUNE IN CAB, brella. Then there was a briefcase containing ton-Park Hotel. He received $8 for the trip FOLLCWS "SIMPLE PHILOSOPHY" important papers and a. child's pocket radio. which usually pays $6.70. Tuesday night was no different. A brown "I left the Sheraton-Park and picked up purse was left on the floor of the cab. Taylor, two other passengers before the last one told HON. W. S. (BILL) STUCKEY 51, opened it to find the owner's identifica­ me there was a purse lying on the floor in OF GEORGIA tion so he could return the purse. !ie saw the back of my cab," Taylor said. "I took it there was money in it and took it to the first and looked in it for an JD. I saw some money, IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES district police station to turn it in. but I did not investigate to see how much. Thursday, April 29, 1976 "I took the purse to police and Det. Ralph That was none of my business. Moore dumped the contents out on the "As a cab driver over the years I've tried Mr. STUCKEY. Mr. Speaker, I com­ table. He counted as I wrote the items to follow a very simple philosophy. When I mend to my colleagues and the Nation down," said Taylor. "Both of us were amazed find something in my cab, my first obligation an article about a man whose honesty that there was so much. We kept saying, is to find the owner," said Taylor, the father should serve as an ins!)iration to us all. 'Wow,nmazing.'" of four. You will note at the conclusion of this The purse was the property of Dollie Cole, "My first natural step was to go back to story that Mr. Taylor is the father of wife of retired General Motors president where I put off my last lady passenger. I Edward N. Cole, both of whom had been went back to the Statler Hilton Hotel and three college students. Another child will passengers in the cab earlier in the evening. tried to find a lady I took there. The man­ graduate from high school this June. The purse contained nearly $42,000 worth ager and doorman said they didn't remem­ With the expenses of· education being of cash, travelers checks and jewelry. ber her and I gave them a real hassle," Tay­ what they are today, I am sure that few For his trouble, Taylor said ·he was given lor sll.id. people could ·have used the money found four crisp $100 bills by Mrs. Cole who "Then it dawned on me that there was in that cab any more than Mr. Taylor. plucked the cash from the top of one of the another lady passenger I ·took to the Shera­ But I am equally certain that Mr. Tay­ piles on the table. In addition, Taylor said, ton-Park. ,I telephoned but they said they the Coles offered him a possible job as a didn't have a Mr. and Mrs. Cole registered," lor has passed en to his children the kind Taylor added. Not knowing what else to do, of :egacy that money cannot buy. chauffeur, earning $18,000 a year. Taylor said he currently earns $8,000 annually. Taylor said he went to turn the purse in to The article follows: The case of the missing-and quite wealth­ the police. Mrs. Cole said she remembers resting her (From the Washington Post, Apr. 29, 1976] laden-purse began at about 10 p.m. Tues­ HACKER FINDs FORTUNE lN CAB, FOLLOWS brown suede purse with gold chains on the day when Taylor went to the National Air­ floor of the cab when she first climbed in. "SIMPLE PHU.OSOPHY" port to pick up what he thought would be But when she arrived at the hotel, she "sim­ (By Joseph D. Whitaker) "just another fare." ply forgot it." During the 30 years he has driven for the He was hailed by Cole, who bad just "Wb,en w~ got to the hotel, my husband Capitol Cab Company, W1lliam Taylor Sr.
Recommended publications
  • Bartow-Pell: a Family Legacy
    Lesson Plan: Bartow-Pell: A Family Legacy Architect: Minard Lafever, with John Bolton, local carpenter, both friends of the Bartow family. Site: Bartow-Pell Mansion Curriculum Link: High School US History and Government (this is a review activity that brings together several units of study) Unit Two: A:2:a and c The peoples and peopling of the American colonies (voluntary and involuntary)—Native American Indians (relations between colonists and Native American Indians, trade, alliances, forced labor, warfare) and Varieties of immigrant motivation, ethnicities, and experiences. A:4 The Revolutionary War and the Declaration of Independence D:1 The Constitution in jeopardy: The American Civil War 7th and 8th Grade Social Studies I. European Exploration and Settlement D. Exploration and settlement of the New York State area by the Dutch and English 1. Relationships between the colonists and the Native American Indians 4. Rivalry between the Dutch and English eventually resulting in English supremacy Project Aim: Through an investigation of the long history of the Bartow-Pell estate, students discover the far-reaching influence of this family in American history throughout their long occupation of this property. Students will also be able to contextualize history as a series of events that are caused by and effect the lives of real people. Students will be able to imagine the great events of American history through the lens of a family local to the Bronx. Vocabulary: Greek Revival: A style of art that was popular in the 19th Century that was a reaction to Baroque Art. This style was derived from the art and culture of ancient Greece and imitated this period’s architecture and fascination for order and simplicity.
    [Show full text]
  • Historic and Cultural Resources of the Sea Breeze Estates Site on City Island in T~E Bronx
    v.~f I. "J,? ~ 'f.. I -,q~1 I I I I HISTORIC AND CULTURAL RESOURCES I OF THE SEA BREEZE ESTATES SITE I CITY ISLAND, THE BRONX I '\ I ( Prepared for: Konheim & Ketcham, Inc. Prepared by: I Joan H. Geismar, PhD. I I I I February 1989 I I 1-.------- I TABLE OF CONTENTS I I TEXT Section Page Number I A. Prehistory. ~ . .1 B. Historical Considerations •••••••••••••••• .2 I C. Landmark Considerations •••••••••••••••••••••••• • •• '"..... 5 I D. Conclusions '" '" '" . • • • ..."..... 5 Bibliography 6 I TABLE OF FIGURES I Number Following Page I 1. Location of Project Site ••••••••••• .........1 2. 1872 Beers Map .. ... ..... ... ...... ........... 4 I 3. 1893 Sanborn "Ma.p 4 I 4. 1935 Sanbord Ma.p 4 5. 1905 Topographical Survey of the Eastern Bronx •••••••••• 4 I 6. 1763, A. Colden Survey.................... •••••••••• 5 I 7. 1987 New York City Tax Map................ •••••••••• 5 I I· I I I I "I Historic and Cultural Resources of the Sea Breeze Estates Site on City Island in t~e Bronx I Prepared for Konhe~ and Ketcham, Inc. By Joan H. Geismar, PhD. I February 1989 A preliminary documentary research was undertaken to assess I historical significance and archaeological poten~ial of the Sea Breeze Estates Site (see Figure 1, Location of Project Site). This assessment relied mainly on maps, printed sources, and, to a lesser degree, informal interviews with residents. In addition, I the archaeological office of the New York State MUseum was contacted to determine the number and whereabouts of any relevant prehistoric sites. And finally, the New York City Landmarks I Preservation Commission was consulted regarding the island's landmarked properties.
    [Show full text]
  • Community Access to the Bronx River in Tremont and Hunts Point Matthew Bodnar
    Fordham University Masthead Logo DigitalResearch@Fordham Student Theses 2001-2013 Environmental Studies 2011 A River Runs Through It: Community Access to the Bronx River in Tremont and Hunts Point Matthew Bodnar Follow this and additional works at: https://fordham.bepress.com/environ_theses Part of the Environmental Sciences Commons Recommended Citation Bodnar, Matthew, "A River Runs Through It: Community Access to the Bronx River in Tremont and Hunts Point" (2011). Student Theses 2001-2013. 79. https://fordham.bepress.com/environ_theses/79 This is brought to you for free and open access by the Environmental Studies at DigitalResearch@Fordham. It has been accepted for inclusion in Student Theses 2001-2013 by an authorized administrator of DigitalResearch@Fordham. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A River Runs Through It: Community Access to the Bronx River in Tremont and Hunts Point Matthew Bodnar May 2011 Rivers that run through urban areas are often neglected and forgotten. This is because the primary services that they provide for major cities are transportation and shipping. Many urban waterways have become polluted as a result and fail to reach much of their potential. New York City’s rivers and waterfronts are not typically a place where people seek recreation in the form of swimming or boating, except for a few places such as Coney Island, City Island, and Rockaway Beach. Other waterways that could be assets for their communities are also sometimes overlooked. After living in the Bronx for three years, the only knowledge that I had about the Bronx River was that it ran through the forest in the Botanical Gardens.
    [Show full text]
  • The Westchester Historian Index, 1990 – 2019
    Westchester Historian Index v. 66-95, 1990 – 2019 Authors ARIANO, Terry Beasts and ballyhoo: the menagerie men of Somers. Summer 2008, 84(3):100-111, illus. BANDON, Alexandra If these walls could talk. Spring 2001, 77(2):52-57, illus. BAROLINI, Helen Aaron Copland lived in Ossining, too. Spring 1999, 75(2):47-49, illus. American 19th-century feminists at Sing Sing. Winter, 2002, 78(1):4-14, illus. Garibaldi in Hastings. Fall 2005, 81(4):105-108, 110, 112-113, illus. BASS, Andy Martin Luther King, Jr.: Visits to Westchester, 1956-1967. Spring 2018, 94(2):36-69, illus. BARRETT, Paul M. Estates of the country place era in Tarrytown. Summer 2014, 90(3):72-93, illus. “Morning” shines again: a lost Westchester treasure is found. Winter 2014, 90(1):4-11, illus. BEDINI, Silvio A. Clock on a wheelbarrow: the advent of the county atlas. Fall 2000, 76(4):100-103, illus. BELL, Blake A. The Hindenburg thrilled Westchester County before its fiery crash. Spring 2005, 81(2):50, illus. John McGraw of Pelham Manor: baseball hall of famer. Spring 2010, 86(2):36-47, illus. Pelham and the Toonerville Trolley. Fall 2006, 82(4):96-111, illus. The Pelhamville train wreck of 1885: “One of the most novel in the records of railroad disasters.” Spring 2004, 80(2):36-47, illus. The sea serpent of the sound: Westchester’s own sea monster. Summer 2016, 92(3):82-93. Thomas Pell’s treaty oak. Summer 2002, 78(3):73-81, illus. The War of 1812 reaches Westchester County.
    [Show full text]
  • City of New Rochelle, New York, As Seen from the Air in 1938
    CITY OF NEW ROCHELLE, NEW YORK, AS SEEN FROM THE AIR IN 1938. HISTORIC NEW ROCHELLE By HERBERT B. NICHOLS Published Bv, THE BOARD OF EDUCATION NEW ROCHELLE/ NEW YORK 1938 COPYRIGHT 1938 BY HERBERT B. NICHOLS FIRST EDITION PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA THE LITTLE PRINT, NEW ROCHELLE, N. Y. HISTORIC NEW ROCHELLE FOREWORD To the publication ~f a little booklet designed for classroom use throughout the public schools of New Rochelle treating of sig­ nificant events in the historic development of the city, impetus was given early this year by the observance of the two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the fou~ding of the "Queen City of the Sound". Preparation at th~t tiine for a pageant revealed that only isolated bits of historic materials were available and that nowhere I was there in print, suitable for school use, a concise and orderly treatment of the circumstances and conditions that led, first, to the selection of a site for refuge for. the fleeing French Huguenots and, later, to its settlement and dev,elopnient. To meet the deficiency, a committee was entrusted with the responsibility of assembling, preparing and editing all known information. How well that job was done "Historic New Rochelle" reveals. Not a booklet, but a full-sized text, scholarly, well organized, care­ fully and authentically documented, and yet, withal, attractively written, interestingly and entertainingly presented, is here given the girls and boys, their parents, the teaching staff, and others who may be interested. In the pages and chapters which follow, environ­ ment becomes a living reality and the reader is privileged to follow, from t}:le beginning to the present, the colorful and intricate threads that make up the historic and fascinating tapestry of New Rochelle.
    [Show full text]
  • William Hamilton Merritt and Pell's Canal.FH11
    Looking back... with Alun Hughes WILLIAM HAMILTON MERRITT AND PELLS CANAL It is not entirely clear when William Hamilton March he wrote to his wife that The waters of Merritt first had the idea of building a canal between Chippawa Creek will be down the 12 in two years Lakes Erie and Ontario. According to his son and from this time as certain as fate. Later that month biographer Jedediah, it was while he was patrolling he held a preliminary meeting at Shipmans Tavern, the Niagara River during the War of 1812, but and in April a subscription was opened to pay for a Merritt himself recalled late in life that the idea came professional survey of the canal route, which took to him after the war when water-supply problems place in May. In June a public meeting was held at plagued his milling operations on the Twelve Mile Beaverdams, and in July Merritt and eight others Creek. The solution he envisaged a supply announced their intention to apply to the Legislature channel to carry water from the Welland River (or for incorporation of what became the Welland Canal Chippawa Creek) into the headwaters of the Twelve Company. The required act was passed in January soon evolved into a canal to carry barge traffic. 1824, and construction began that November. In 1817 Merritt presented the case for a canal as part of Grantham Townships response to Robert Gourlay One authority suggests that the answer to the for this Statistical Account of Upper Canada, and mystery of Pells Canal lies in Chautauqua, in a in September 1818, with the help of others, he used proposal made around 1800 to replace the ancient a borrowed water level to survey the rise of land portage road between Lake Erie and Chautauqua between the two creeks to assess the ideas feasibilty.
    [Show full text]
  • Indian Histories at Ticonderoga; Nicholas Westbrook
    From the Editors Arguably the most important year in Hudson Valley history since 1909, we are already in the midst of celebrations surrounding the Hudson-Fulton-Champlain Quadricentennial. This issue commemorates the accomplishments and legacies of all three honorees—Henry Hudson, Robert Fulton, and Samuel de Champlain— as well as the lasting contributions of the commission that planned events sur- rounding the 1909 Hudson-Fulton Tercentenary. We open with a review of the 1909 festivities and follow with a brief survey of Dutch archival history from the preeminent historian and translator of New Netherland manuscripts. For the complete story on Robert Fulton, readers should reference our Autumn 2007 issue, which contained a lengthy biography of the inventor. Here its author offers a brief summary of Fulton’s steamboat voyage and how it revolutionized transportation, in America and around the world. Delving into the Champlain Valley for the first time, we begin at the beginning, with an article tracing the Native American presence there from prehistory to the American Revolution. We return to Hudson with an overview written by William T. Reynolds, the captain of the Replica Ship The Half Moon, and an excerpt of Robert Juet’s journal of the voyage. Joyce Goodfriend illustrates both the power of the Dutch cultural legacy and the tensions caused by the British control after 1664. Lastly, André Senecal explains Champlain and the circumstances that led to his actions in 1609. We conclude with two more articles exploring the signal contributions Hudson and Champlain made to local and world history. Our Regional History Forums focus on the Hudson-Fulton-Champlain Quadricentennial Commission, which has organized the yearlong celebration, and Walkway Over the Hudson State Park, perhaps the greatest legacy of the 400th celebration.
    [Show full text]
  • A Journal of Regional Studies
    SPRING 2009 THE HUDSON RIVER VALLEY REVIEW A Journal of Regional Studies Hudson • Fu l t o n • Champlain Quadricentennial Commemorative Issue Published by the Hudson River Valley Institute THE HUDSON RIVER VA LLEY REviEW A Journal of Regional Studies Publisher Thomas S. Wermuth, Vice President for Academic Affairs, Marist College Editors Christopher Pryslopski, Program Director, Hudson River Valley Institute, Marist College Reed Sparling, writer, Scenic Hudson Editorial Board Art Director Myra Young Armstead, Professor of History, Richard Deon Bard College Business Manager Col. Lance Betros, Professor and deputy head, Andrew Villani Department of History, U.S. Military Academy at West Point The Hudson River Valley Review (ISSN 1546-3486) is published twice Susan Ingalls Lewis, Assistant Professor of History, a year by the Hudson River Valley State University of New York at New Paltz Institute at Marist College. Sarah Olson, Superintendent, Roosevelt- James M. Johnson, Executive Director Vanderbilt National Historic Sites Roger Panetta, Professor of History, Research Assistants Fordham University William Burke H. Daniel Peck, Professor of English, Lindsay Moreau Vassar College Elizabeth Vielkind Robyn L. Rosen, Associate Professor of History, Hudson River Valley Institute Marist College Advisory Board David Schuyler, Professor of American Studies, Todd Brinckerhoff, Chair Franklin & Marshall College Peter Bienstock, Vice Chair Thomas S. Wermuth, Vice President of Academic Dr. Frank Bumpus Affairs, Marist College, Chair Frank J. Doherty
    [Show full text]
  • May 2011 One Dollar WARM UP! PLAY BALL!
    Periodicals Paid at Bronx, N.Y. USPS 114-590 Volume 40 Number 4 May 2011 One Dollar WARM UP! PLAY BALL! The Garden Club of City Island Celebrates 50 Years of Beautification By BARBARA HARRISON Residents, business owners and visitors Photos by BARBARA HARRISON consider the Garden Club’s “Welcome to Barbara Healy Hoffman, president of the City Island” sign, with its 12-meter sloop Garden Club of City Island, looks over a silhouette at the top, a warm “hello” to 1962 newspaper article describing the our Island community. club’s charter with the Federated Garden Club of New York State. The article is affiliated with the state organization. illustrated with a photograph of the club’s The club’s first mission was to reha- founders, Rose Healy (Mrs. Hoffman’s bilitate the Memorial Triangle at the north mother) and Jacqueline Kyle Kall, who end of the Island, and since that time, was the club’s first president. the club has completed many projects— At 50 years of age, the Garden Club including the restoration and renovation of of City Island, now 40 members strong, Hawkins Street Park in 1973 (and again in has once again begun its annual spring 2009); planting the Promenade Park near Photos by RICK DeWITT fund-raising drive to help keep City Island the bridge in 1981 (now the Catherine Scott Despite the cold, dreary weather left over from the winter of 2011, the City Island Avenue and our public areas, parks and Promenade) and planting the Brotherhood Little League (CILL) season began successfully on Saturday, April 16.
    [Show full text]
  • THE BULLETIN Number 55 July 1972
    THE BULLETIN Number 55 July 1972 Contents The Bear Rock Petroglyphs Site 1 Nicholas A. Shoumatoff Editorial Policy on Date Reporting 5 L.A.B. The Ryders Pond Site II 6 Julius Lopez and Stanley Wisniewski Minutes of 56th Annual Meeting 20 Program, NYSAA Annual Meeting 23 Iroquosia – Three Reviews 24 Marion E. White No. 55, July 1972 1 THE BEAR ROCK PETROGLYPHS SITE Nichola s A. Shoumatoff Metropolitan Chapter Introduction It is remarkable that the Bear Rock Petroglyphs Site has existed so long unrecorded, known only to a handful of native residents. Thorne Duel and M.R. Harrington were active in the vicinity of the site between 1898 and 1910, yet discovery of the petroglyphs escaped them. It is even more remarkable that the site was overlooked by Leslie Verne Case, a Westchester schoolteacher and amateur archeologist who worked with Duel and did extensive survey work within a half mile of the site. In his manuscripts Case mentions only a petroglyph that formerly stood in a cove north of Greystone Station in Yonkers. The stone and its designs were known to two old Cross River- Poundridge families, the Whitman family and the Breuninger family. Carl Breuninger told the author that it was known as Bear Rock in his family. The author learned of its existence from Frank R. Whitman of Cross River, while employed in 1967 as state fire tower observer on the Ward Pound Ridge Reservation, where the rock is located. Preliminary photographs and drawings were shown to Louis A. Brennan of the N.Y.S.A.A., who encouraged the author to execute a recording of the site.
    [Show full text]
  • An Archaeology of the Pelham Bay Park Homeless Encampment
    Vague Dwelling: An Archaeology of The Pelham Bay Park Homeless Encampment Courtney Elizabeth Singleton Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy under the Executive Committee of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2021 © 2020 Courtney Elizabeth Singleton All Rights Reserved Abstract Vague Dwelling: An Archaeology of The Pelham Bay Park Homeless Encampment Courtney Elizabeth Singleton This dissertation is an archaeological investigation of a late 20th century homeless encampment in Pelham Bay Park, New York City. This project examines the relationship between aspects of dwelling and the social status of homelessness within an iconic urban setting in the United States. In contemporary public discourse, the meaning of "homelessness" seems self-evident to most people as a condition defined by lack: a lack of permanence in general and of a permanent dwelling place in particular, a lack of personal possessions and personal relations, and most consequentially, a lack of political status. This research interrogates these assumptions by reading homelessness through the material record that people left behind, of what they did have when they inhabited spaces outside the sanctioned institutions for the "homeless," spaces where people intentionally dwelled and created their own structures of home. This project returns us to the most basic questions in the study of homelessness in the United States: what exactly is homelessness, what does it mean to be homeless, and how are people marked or recognized as homeless within our society? In order to answer these questions, this research explores how boundaries defining homelessness manifest and are articulated within our society.
    [Show full text]
  • Native Americans, the Dutch, and Mistress Anne Hutchinson By
    Native Americans, the Dutch, and Mistress Anne Hutchinson By Richard Forliano Eastchester Town Historian When Henry Hudson, an Englishman of dark and moody character, arrived on his ship the Half Moon in 1609 and sailed up the river that would take his name, he claimed the land that would later be called New York for the Netherlands. Hudson was looking for the elusive Northwest Passage to India. His initial contact with the Indians did not go well, when John Colman, one of his crew, perished after taking an arrow to the neck. Hudson would be dead in the next 2 years. The first evidence of humans in this area seems to date from 5000 BC. Primarily hunters and gatherers, hunting deer, rabbits, bear, elk, birds and collecting nuts, seeds, and berries. As time passed, these semi- nomadic tribes began to raise corn, beans, and squash while also harvesting shellfish of clams, oysters, and mussels from the nearby seashore. When Hudson arrived, a variety of tribes spoke the Lenni Lenape tongue with odd sounding names like Wickquasageck and Rechgawawank (Manhattans). The indigenous people, contrary to popular belief, did not refer to themselves as Siwanoy, although the Europeans called them by that name. These tribes all shared some general cultural characteristics. The village was the most important unit and tribal allegiance was extremely loose. These people spoke the Lenni Lenape language but different tribal groups had their own dialects. Communication with each other was difficult. These societies known to Europeans as Algonquians often lived in wigwams, made dug-out canoes, and used slash-burn methods to clear the land.
    [Show full text]