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Hudson River Watershed 2002 Water Quality Assessment Report
HUDSON RIVER WATERSHED 2002 WATER QUALITY ASSESSMENT REPORT COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF ENVIRONMENTAL AFFAIRS ROBERT W. GOLLEDGE, JR, SECRETARY MASSACHUSETTS DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION ARLEEN O’DONNELL, ACTING COMMISSIONER BUREAU OF RESOURCE PROTECTION GLENN HAAS, ACTING ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER DIVISION OF WATERSHED MANAGEMENT GLENN HAAS, DIRECTOR NOTICE OF AVAILABILITY LIMITED COPIES OF THIS REPORT ARE AVAILABLE AT NO COST BY WRITTEN REQUEST TO: MASSACHUSETTS DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION DIVISION OF WATERSHED MANAGEMENT 627 MAIN STREET WORCESTER, MA 01608 This report is also available from the MassDEP’s home page on the World Wide Web at: http://www.mass.gov/dep/water/resources/wqassess.htm Furthermore, at the time of first printing, eight copies of each report published by this office are submitted to the State Library at the State House in Boston; these copies are subsequently distributed as follows: · On shelf; retained at the State Library (two copies); · Microfilmed retained at the State Library; · Delivered to the Boston Public Library at Copley Square; · Delivered to the Worcester Public Library; · Delivered to the Springfield Public Library; · Delivered to the University Library at UMass, Amherst; · Delivered to the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C. Moreover, this wide circulation is augmented by inter-library loans from the above-listed libraries. For example a resident in Marlborough can apply at their local library for loan of any MassDEP/DWM report from the Worcester Public Library. A complete list of reports published since 1963 is updated annually and printed in July. This report, entitled, “Publications of the Massachusetts Division of Watershed Management – Watershed Planning Program, 1963-(current year)”, is also available by writing to the Division of Watershed Management (DWM) in Worcester. -
One Life Changed Billy Gene Jones Credits His Success to His Children’S Home Upbringing
FALL 2008 One Life Changed Billy Gene Jones Credits His Success To His Children’s Home Upbringing In this Issue: Donor Spotlight: The Dacus Family Children and Staff Enjoy Variety of Activities ‘Tis the Season of Giving METHODIST FAMILY HEALTH: THE COMPASSION BEHIND THE CARE CONTINUUM OF CARE Board of Directors Mr. Maurice Caldwell Mrs. Jane Hardin Mrs. Sally Riggs METHODIST FAMILY HEALTH Rison Little Rock Little Rock Mr. Harry Clerget Mrs. Becky Kossover* Mr. Neill Sloan* Mr. Lesley Don Cole* Little Rock Little Rock Lake Village Little Rock Chairperson Dr. Charles Clogston Mr. Bill Mann Mrs. Jan Snider* Little Rock Little Rock Little Rock Mr. Michael Millar* Searcy Bishop Charles Crutchfield Reverend C.E. McAdoo Mrs. Lynn Staten* Vice Chairperson Little Rock Hot Springs Village Little Rock Mr. Ritter Arnold* Mr. Rodney Curry Mr. Eugene Miller Mr. Donald Weaver* Marked Tree Conway Hazen Conway Mr. Ernie Butler* Mrs. Pat Freemyer Mrs. Anne Powell-Black* * Methodist Family Health Little Rock Helena-West Helena North Little Rock Foundation Board Member s traditional celebrations such as Thanksgiving, Advent and Christmas unfold, Methodist Family Health appreciates your belief in our tradition to provide quality care for Arkansas’ children and families. Our continuum of care incorporates more than a century of traditions that respect the emotional essence of childhood. AIn this issue, we share old and new traditions that are the foundation for our comprehensive behavioral healthcare system. • Endowments and estate giving: The legacy of donors Charles Nolan and Ruth and Karen Dacus lives on through the first residential treatment center located in Craighead County. -
Social Life in the Early Republic: a Machine-Readable Transcription
Library of Congress Social life in the early republic vii PREFACE peared to them, or recall the quaint figures of Mrs. Alexander Hamilton and Mrs. Madison in old age, or the younger faces of Cora Livingston, Adèle Cutts, Mrs. Gardiner G. Howland, and Madame de Potestad. To those who have aided her with personal recollections or valuable family papers and letters the author makes grateful acknowledgment, her thanks being especially due to Mrs. Samuel Phillips Lee, Mrs. Beverly Kennon, Mrs. M. E. Donelson Wilcox, Miss Virginia Mason, Mr. James Nourse and the Misses Nourse of the Highlands, to Mrs. Robert K. Stone, Miss Fanny Lee Jones, Mrs. Semple, Mrs. Julia F. Snow, Mr. J. Henley Smith, Mrs. Thompson H. Alexander, Miss Rosa Mordecai, Mrs. Harriot Stoddert Turner, Miss Caroline Miller, Mrs. T. Skipwith Coles, Dr. James Dudley Morgan, and Mr. Charles Washington Coleman. A. H. W. Philadelphia, October, 1902. ix CONTENTS Chapter Page I— A Social Evolution 13 II— A Predestined Capital 42 Social life in the early republic http://www.loc.gov/resource/lhbcb.29033 Library of Congress III— Homes and Hostelries 58 IV— County Families 78 V— Jeffersonian Simplicity 102 VI— A Queen of Hearts 131 VII— The Bladensburg Races 161 VII— Peace and Plenty 179 IX— Classics and Cotillions 208 X— A Ladies' Battle 236 XI— Through Several Administrations 267 XII— Mid-Century Gayeties 296 xi ILLUSTRATIONS Page Mrs. Richard Gittings, of Baltimore (Polly Sterett) Frontispiece From portrait by Charles Willson Peale, owned by her great-grandson, Mr. D. Sterett Gittings, of Baltimore. Mrs. Gittings eyes are dark brown, the hair dark brown, with lighter shades through it; the gown of delicate pink, the sleeves caught up with pearls, the sash of a gray shade. -
Martin Van Buren National Historic Site
M ARTIN VAN BUREN NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE ADMINISTRATIVE HISTORY, 1974-2006 SUZANNE JULIN NATIONAL PARK SERVICE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR NORTHEAST REGION HISTORY PROGRAM JULY 2011 i Cover Illustration: Exterior Restoration of Lindenwald, c. 1980. Source: Martin Van Buren National Historic Site ii TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Illustrations vii Acknowledgements ix Introduction 1 Chapter One: Recognizing Lindenwald: The Establishment Of Martin Van Buren National Historic Site 5 Chapter Two: Toward 1982: The Race To The Van Buren Bicentennial 27 Chapter Three: Saving Lindenwald: Restoration, Preservation, Collections, and Planning, 1982-1987 55 Chapter Four: Finding Space: Facilities And Boundaries, 1982-1991 73 Chapter Five: Interpreting Martin Van Buren And Lindenwald, 1980-2000 93 Chapter Six: Finding Compromises: New Facilities And The Protection of Lindenwald, 1992-2006 111 Chapter Seven: New Possibilities: Planning, Interpretation and Boundary Expansion 2000-2006 127 Conclusion: Martin Van Buren National Historic Site Administrative History 143 Appendixes: Appendix A: Martin Van Buren National Historic Site Visitation, 1977-2005 145 Appendix B: Martin Van Buren National Historic Site Staffi ng 147 Appendix C: Martin Van Buren National Historic Site Studies, Reports, And Planning Documents 1936-2006 151 Bibliography 153 Index 159 v LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Figure 1.1. Location of MAVA on Route 9H in Kinderhook, NY Figure 1.2. Portrait of the young Martin Van Buren by Henry Inman, circa 1840 Library of Congress Figure 1.3. Photograph of the elderly Martin Van Buren, between 1840 and 1862 Library of Congress Figure 1.4. James Leath and John Watson of the Columbia County Historical Society Photograph MAVA Collection Figure 2.1. -
The Legend of Sleepy Hollow
University of South Carolina Scholar Commons Faculty Publications English Language and Literatures, Department of 2004 Troubling Our Heads about Ichabod: "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow," Classic American Literature, and the Sexual Politics of Homosocial Brotherhood David Greven University of South Carolina - Columbia, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/engl_facpub Part of the English Language and Literature Commons Publication Info Published in American Quarterly, Volume 56, Issue 1, 2004, pages 83-110. © American Quarterly 2004, John Hopkins University Press Greven, D. (2004). Troubling our heads about Ichabod: “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow,” classic American literature, and the sexual politics of homosocial brotherhood. American Quarterly, 56(1), 83-110. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/aq.2004.0006 This Article is brought to you by the English Language and Literatures, Department of at Scholar Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty Publications by an authorized administrator of Scholar Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 7URXEOLQJ2XU+HDGVDERXW,FKDERG7KH/HJHQGRI 6OHHS\+ROORZ&ODVVLF$PHULFDQ/LWHUDWXUHDQGWKH 6H[XDO3ROLWLFVRI+RPRVRFLDO%URWKHUKRRG 'DYLG*UHYHQ American Quarterly, Volume 56, Number 1, March 2004, pp. 83-110 (Article) 3XEOLVKHGE\-RKQV+RSNLQV8QLYHUVLW\3UHVV DOI: 10.1353/aq.2004.0006 For additional information about this article http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/aq/summary/v056/56.1greven.html Access provided by Lou __ACCESS_STATEMENT__ Beth Holtz Library Endowment (16 Jul 2015 15:23 GMT) TROUBLING OUR HEADS 83 Troubling Our Heads about Ichabod: “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow,” Classic American Literature, and the Sexual Politics of Homosocial Brotherhood DAVID GREVEN Boston University ANTEBELLUM AMERICAN MEN WERE SCOPOPHILIC SPECTACLES, PROJECTED ONTO vast social screens where they were perpetually scrutinized by innu- merable punitive eyes. -
Hydrogeology of the Schodack-Kinderhook Area, Rensselaer and Columbia Counties, New York
Hydrogeology of the Schodack-Kinderhook Area, Rensselaer and Columbia Counties, New York U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Open-File Report 97-639 Prepared in cooperation with NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION Cover: View of Moordener Kill from State Rt. 150 in Brookview, N.Y., looking west (downstream). Note exposed bedrock in streambed. (Photo by R.J. Reynolds, 1999). Hydrogeology of the Schodack-Kinderhook Area, Rensselaer and Columbia Counties, New York By Richard J. Reynolds ______________________________________________________________ U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Open-File Report 97-639 Prepared in cooperation with the NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION science for a changing world Troy, New York 1999 i U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR BRUCE BABBITT, Secretary U.S. Geological Survey Charles G. Groat, Director ______________________________________________________________________ For additional information Copies of this report may be write to: purchased from: U.S. Geological Survey U.S. Geological Survey 425 Jordan Road Branch of Information Services Troy, NY 12180-8349 P.O. Box 25286 Denver, CO 80225 ii CONTENTS Abstract ................................................................................................................................................................................. 1 Introduction ........................................................................................................................................................................... 1 Purpose and Scope ......................................................................................................................................................... -
Distribution of Ddt, Chlordane, and Total Pcb's in Bed Sediments in the Hudson River Basin
NYES&E, Vol. 3, No. 1, Spring 1997 DISTRIBUTION OF DDT, CHLORDANE, AND TOTAL PCB'S IN BED SEDIMENTS IN THE HUDSON RIVER BASIN Patrick J. Phillips1, Karen Riva-Murray1, Hannah M. Hollister2, and Elizabeth A. Flanary1. 1U.S. Geological Survey, 425 Jordan Road, Troy NY 12180. 2Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Troy NY 12180. Abstract Data from streambed-sediment samples collected from 45 sites in the Hudson River Basin and analyzed for organochlorine compounds indicate that residues of DDT, chlordane, and PCB's can be detected even though use of these compounds has been banned for 10 or more years. Previous studies indicate that DDT and chlordane were widely used in a variety of land use settings in the basin, whereas PCB's were introduced into Hudson and Mohawk Rivers mostly as point discharges at a few locations. Detection limits for DDT and chlordane residues in this study were generally 1 µg/kg, and that for total PCB's was 50 µg/kg. Some form of DDT was detected in more than 60 percent of the samples, and some form of chlordane was found in about 30 percent; PCB's were found in about 33 percent of the samples. Median concentrations for p,p’- DDE (the DDT residue with the highest concentration) were highest in samples from sites representing urban areas (median concentration 5.3 µg/kg) and lower in samples from sites in large watersheds (1.25 µg/kg) and at sites in nonurban watersheds. (Urban watershed were defined as those with a population density of more than 60/km2; nonurban watersheds as those with a population density of less than 60/km2, and large watersheds as those encompassing more than 1,300 km2. -
VOL. 1889 Twentieth Annual Reunion of the Association of the Graduates of the United States Military Academy, at West Point
TWENTIETH ANNUAL REUNION OF THE ASSOCIATION I GRADUATES OF THE UNITED STATES MILITARY ACADEMY, AT WEST POINT, NEW YORK, _YUNE i21/t, 1889. EAST SAGINAW, MICH. EVENING NEWS PRINTING AND BINDING HOUSE. 1889. Annual Reunion, June 2th, 1889. MINUTES OF THE BUSINESS MEETING. WEST POINT, N. Y., JUNE 12th, 1889. The Association met in the Chapel of the United States Mili- tary Academy, at 2.30 o'clock P. M., and was called to order by General George W. Cullum, of the Executive Committee. The Chaplain of the Military Academy offered the customary prayer. The roll was then called by the Secretary. ROLL OF MEMBERS. Those present are indicated by a *, and those deceased in italic. 1808. 1820. Sylvanus Thayer. Edward G. W. Butler. Rawlins Lowndes. 1814. John M. Tufts. Charles S. Merchant. 1821. 1815. ~181~~5~.~Seth M. Capron. Simon Willard. 1822.1822. James Monroe. WILLIAM C. YOUNG. Thomas J. Leslie. David H. Vinton. Charles Davies. Isaac R. Trimble. Benjamin H. Wright. 1818. 1823. Horace Webster. Alfred Mordeca. Harvey Brown. GEORGE S. GREENE. Hartman Bache. HANNIBAL DAY. George H. Crosman. 1819. Edmund B. Alexander. Edward D. Mansfield. 1824. Henry Brewerton. Henry A. Thompson. Dennis H. Mahan. Joshua Baker. Robert P. Parrott, Daniel Tyler. John King Findlay. William H. Swift. John M. Fessenden. 4 ANNUAL REUNION, JUNE 12Tli, 1889. 1825. Ward B. Burnett. James H. Simpson. Washington Seawell. Alfred Brush. N. Sayre Harris. Rlo2Randolph B. Marcy. 1826. ALBERT G. EDWARDS. WILLIAM H. C. BARTLETT. 1833. Samuel P. Heintzelman. John G. Barnard. AUGUSTUS J. PLEASANTON. *GEORGE W. CULLUM. Edwin B. Babbitt. -
Flood Resilience Education in the Hudson River Estuary: Needs Assessment and Program Evaluation
NEW YORK STATE WATER RESOURCES INSTITUTE Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences 1123 Bradfield Hall, Cornell University Tel: (607) 255-3034 Ithaca, NY 14853-1901 Fax: (607) 255-2016 http://wri.eas.cornell.edu Email: [email protected] Flood Resilience Education in the Hudson River Estuary: Needs Assessment and Program Evaluation Shorna Allred Department of Natural Resources (607) 255-2149 [email protected] Gretchen Gary Department of Natural Resources (607) 269-7859 [email protected] Catskill Creek at Woodstock Dam during low flow (L) and flood conditions (R) Photo Credit - Elizabeth LoGiudice Abstract In recent decades, very heavy rain events (the heaviest 1% of all rain events from 1958-2012) have increased in frequency by 71% in the Northeast U.S. As flooding increases, so does the need for flood control Decisions related to flood control are the responsibility of many individuals and groups across the spectrum of a community, such as local planners, highway departments, and private landowners. Such decisions include strategies to minimize future Flood Resilience Education in the Hudson River Estuary: Needs Assessment and Program Evaluation flooding impacts while also properly responding to storm impacts to streams and adjacent and associated infrastructure. This project had three main components: 1) a flood education needs assessment of local municipal officials (2013), 2) an evaluation of a flood education program for highway personnel (2013), and 3) a survey of riparian landowners (2014). The riparian landowner needs assessment determined that the majority of riparian landowners in the region have experienced flooding, yet few are actually engaging in stream management to mitigate flood issues on their land. -
Chittenden Falls Hydroelectric Project FERC Project No
ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT FOR HYDROPOWER LICENSE Chittenden Falls Hydroelectric Project FERC Project No. 3273-024 New York Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Office of Energy Projects Division of Hydropower Licensing 888 First Street, NE Washington, D.C. 20426 January 2021 TABLE OF CONTENTS LIST OF FIGURES ........................................................................................................... xii LIST OF TABLES ............................................................................................................ xiii ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS ......................................................................... xiv 1.0 INTRODUCTION .................................................................................................... 1 1.1 Application .................................................................................................... 1 1.2 Purpose of Action and Need For Power ........................................................ 2 1.2.1 Purpose of Action ............................................................................ 2 1.2.2 Need for Power ................................................................................ 4 1.3 Statutory and Regulatory Requirements ....................................................... 4 1.4 Public Review and Comment ........................................................................ 4 1.4.1 Scoping ............................................................................................ 4 1.4.2 Interventions ................................................................................... -
Wisconsin Folklore and Folklife Society Which Has Excellent Promise
FOLKLORE Walker D. Wyman Acknowledgement Unive rsity of Wisconsin-Extension· is especially indebted to Dr. Loren Robin son of the Department of J ournali sm, University of Wisconsin, River Fall s, and lo Leon Zaborowski, Universit y Extension, River Falls, for the initial concept of a series of articles on Wisconsin fo lklore, published through daily and weekly newspa pe rs in Wisconsin. It was from those articles by Walker Wyman that this book was developed. The contribution of the va rious newspapers which ca rried the articles is also gratefully acknowledged. A Grass Roots Book Copyright © 1979 by Unive r sity of Wisconsin Boar d of Regents All r ight s r eserved Libra ry of Congress Catalog Ca rd Number 79-65323 Published by University of Wisconsin-Extension Department of Arts Development. Price: $4.95 ii Foreword The preparation of a book on folklore to be published by the University Exten sion is a major event. There has been, for many years, strong sentiment that the University of Wisconsi n ought to take a more dynamic interest in folklore, and that eventually, academic work in that subject should be established on many of the cam puses. So far only the Universities at Eau C laire, River Falls, and at Stevens Point have formal courses. The University at M adison has never had an y such course though informal interest has been strongly present. The University at R iver Falls has developed, through the activities and interests of Dr. Walker W yman, a publish ing program which has produced several books of regional fol klore. -
The Yankee Comic Character: Its Origins
THE YANKEE COMIC CHARACTER: ITS ORIGINS AND DEVELOP:MENT IN AMERICAN LITERATURE THROUGH 1830 By ALECIA A CRAMER Bachelor ofArts Oklahoma State University StiUwater, Oklahoma 1991 Submitted to the Faculty ofthe Graduate College ofthe Oklahoma State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF ARTS July, ]995 OKLAHOMA STATE UNIVERSITY THE YANKEE COMIC CHARACTER: ITS ORIGINS AND DEVELOP:MENT IN AMERICAN LITERATURE THROUGH 1830 Thesis Approved: a-L C. ii PREFACE This study attempts to address why the Yankee comic character became the butt of early American humor and how the character developed into an enduring comic figure in American literature. The Yankee comic character has developed into one ofthe most enduring comic characters in American Literature, appearing many times in Mark Twain's fiction and in various works ofcomedy in the twentieth century. Many scholars have addressed the development ofthe Yankee in American literature after the 1830s, but little attention is paid to the origins ofthis character type and the development ofthe Yankee character into the mature, weU-developed type ofthe 1830s. The Yankee character was at once both a simple, naive rustic with a uruque dialect and a shrewd, practical manipulator full ofambition and greed. As he changes and develops, the Yankee comic character :embodies the complexities and incongruities ofa democratic society struggling to fuse the ideal with the real, the language ofculture with the language ofthe ordinary man. I wish to express my sincere gratitude to my thesis adviser, Dr. Jeffrey Walker, for his unlimited help, patience and encouragement of my research and writing efforts.