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The Autumn 2021 issue of The Review

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The Autumn 2021 issue of The Review

Dec 01, 2021

detail of issue's cover showing a young girl, barefoot, leading horses along a canal towpath, the bow of a canal barge is seen over her right shoulder

We received numerous notes and inquiries after dedicating our Autumn 2020 issue to the memory of our colleague David Schuyler. Some of these expressions of unexpected loss have grown into the remembrances that appear in this issue, all of which attest to the fact that David was an extraordinary teacher, writer, and mentor to so many. This issue also includes two articles focused on different aspects of the Delaware & Hudson Canal. Bill Merchant presents many untold stories shedding light on immigrants, people of color, women, and children who built and worked the canal. Until now, their contributions have remained obscure, largely neglected in the records as well as by researchers. Paul C. King focuses on the innovations of John Roebling, a German immigrant who designed aqueducts for the canal before going on to create his masterpiece, the Brooklyn Bridge. Finally, Bart Harloe introduces us to his ancestor William Harloe, also an immigrant (in his case from Ireland) who built a business and political career in Poughkeepsie at the dawn of the Gilded Age.

You can preview the issue and read the Regional History Symposium, Book Reviews, and New and Noteworthy Books online at: https://www.hudsonrivervalley.org/back-issues.

The Hudson River Valley Review is available at select booksellers and museum gift-shops throughout the region for $15.00 each. Subscriptions are available through the website at: https://www.hudsonrivervalley.org/subscriptions, or by calling 845-575-3052. A one-year subscription (two issues) is $20.00, save even more by subscribing for two years at $35.00.

The Hudson River Valley Institute at Marist College is the center for the study and promotion of the Hudson River Valley, providing information about the region’s history, culture, economy, and environment, and educational resources to teachers, students, and others through www.hudsonrivervalley.org, public programming, and The Hudson River Valley Review. This biannual journal covers all aspects of regional history. All articles in The Hudson River Valley Review undergo peer review.

 
THE HUDSON RIVER VALLEY REVIEW


Volume 38, Number 1, Autumn 2021
   
Celebrating the Life and Work of David Schuyler
David Schuyler: Helping To Build a Better World,  J. Winthrop Aldrich
David Schuyler and the Hudson River Valley, Francis R. Kowsky
Kindred Spirits: Reflections on the Hudson River School in Memory of David Schuyler, Nancy Siegel
David Schuyler: Chronicler of the Hudson Valley’s “Sanctified Landscape” and its Role in America’s Nineteenth-Century National Identity, Frances F. Dunwell
David Schuyler and Downing Studies, Kerry Dean Carso
The Hudson River Valley’s Historian, Ned Sullivan and Reed Sparling
David Schuyler and the Aesthetic Landscape, Harvey K. Flad


Articles
Stories of the Marginalized Workers of the D&H Canal, Bill Merchant
Roebling’s Hudson Valley Aqueducts,  Paul C. King
Precarious Poughkeepsie: A Story of Ambition and Urban Politics in the Hudson River Valley at the Beginning of the Gilded Age, Bart Harloe
   
 Plus: Book Reviews and New & Noteworthy Titles Received