Cemetery Tour Reservations Open

Cemetery Tour Reservations Open

MARGARETVILLE – Reservations for the Historical Society of Middletown’s 10th Living History Cemetery Tour are now open.

The popular tour will be held Saturday, June 17, 2023 at Margaretville Cemetery. Rain date is June 18.

In addition to the one-hour walking tour, offered six times between 4 and 6 p.m., there will be a special early bird performance at 2 p.m. on stage at the Open Eye Theater on Main Street to accommodate those with mobility issues.

Reservations for both staged and on-site performances are required and can be made by calling 845-586-4736.

Tickets are $20; those 15 or under get in free.

This year’s tour will feature portrayals of six people from Middletown’s past. Tour goers led by costumed guides will meet these spirits and learn about their lives.

They include German immigrant wagonmaker Herman Henry Rotermund, portrayed by Gary Falk; farmer and creamery manager Calvin Davis, played by Ken Taylor; Huldah Allison Austin, who witnessed the coming of the railroad age as a farm wife and mother, played by Sheila Ayres; author and college professor Mary Elizabeth Osborn, portrayed by Rebecca Newman; Howard Baker, who served in the cavalry in Cuba, played by Kevin Bewersdorf; and Amos Sperling, a cook aboard circus man Charles Ringling’s yacht, played by John Bernhardt.

Connie Jeffers will roam the grounds as a mysterious Roma (‘gypsy’), and Dan Ayres, as photographer Ward Carman, camera in hand, will document the event.

Returning as directors of this year’s production are Frank Canavan and Joyce St. George. Script writers were Erwin Karl, Amy Taylor, Diane Galusha, Sue DeBruin, Ellen Stewart and Mary Barile.

Tour guides will be Eli Taylor, Emily Vieyra and Sally Scrimshaw.

For more information on HSM events and to become a member, visit mtownhistory.org.

Sat., June 17, 2023 — 10th Living History Cemetery Tour

Meet six people from Middletown’s past on a one-hour guided walk through Margaretville Cemetery. Walking tours offered in six time slots from 4-6 p.m.  Reservations required. Details to come.

If you would like to be an at-large, silent vignette player, call Diane Galusha at 845-586-4973.

Early bird performance 2 p.m. on stage at the Open Eye Theater to accommodate those whose mobility issues may prevent their enjoyment of the on-site event.

Historical Society names 2023 Cemetery Tour cast

Historical Society names 2023 Cemetery Tour cast

March 28, 2023

MARGARETVILLE – The Historical Society of the Town of Middletown (HSM) has announced cast members for its 10th Living History Cemetery Tour to be held Saturday, June 17 at Margaretville Cemetery.

In addition to the walking tour, offered in six time slots from 4 to 6 p.m., there will be a special early bird performance at 2 p.m. on stage at the Open Eye Theater to accommodate those whose mobility issues may prevent their enjoyment of the on-site event.

This year’s tour will feature portrayals of six people from Middletown’s past. Tour goers led by costumed guides will meet these spirits and learn about their lives while strolling through the scenic cemetery with its beautiful views across the East Branch valley.

HSM welcomes two actors new to the tour: Rebecca Newman will portray Mary Elizabeth Osborn, professor, poet and author whose novels reflected people and places from her home town; and Kevin Bewersdorf playing Howard Baker, who served with the US cavalry in Cuba before his tragic death in a railroad accident.

John Bernhardt is returning for his 10th cemetery tour, this time portraying Amos Sperling who was a cook for circus man Charles Ringling. Another veteran tour actor, Agnes Laub, will appear as Huldah Allison Austin telling of the changes that rocked her world in the mid-19th century.

Gary Falk will portray Herman Henry Rotermund, a German immigrant wagon maker and Civil War veteran. Ken Taylor will play Margaretville farmer and creamery manager Calvin Davis.

Connie Jeffers will roam the grounds as a peripatetic ‘gypsy’ whose like traveled through Middletown in the early 1900s. Yet to be named are other at-large players who will appear in silent vignettes throughout the cemetery. If you would like to be one of them, or a tour guide, please contact Diane Galusha at 845-586-4973.

Directors of this year’s production are Frank Canavan and Joyce St. George, back for their eighth tour. Scriptwriters include Diane Galusha, Erwin Karl, Sue DeBruin, Mary Barile, Amy Taylor and Ellen Stewart.

Reservations are required for both the tour and the Open Eye performance. Details will be announced. For more information on HSM events and to become a member, visit mtownhistory.org.

Building update, new trustees highlight annual meeting

Two new trustees – Alana Siegel of New Kingston and Michael Fairbairn of Millbrook – were elected to the Board of the Historical Society of the Town of Middletown at its 18th Annual Meeting October 22. Long-time HSM President Diane Galusha was also re-elected to a three-year term.

In the annual report to members, Galusha provided an update on plans to build an addition on the HSM program hall on Cemetery Road near Margaretville.

“We have good news!,” Galusha announced. “Construction on the 1100-square-foot addition to our hall will begin in the spring!” Cole and Griffin (Rob Cole and Gina Griffin) have been engaged to build the addition using plans developed by engineer Paul Gossen.

This will accommodate the archives with room to work on historic materials as well as a reading/research space. There will be an office, an accessible rest room and a lobby with some display space. The addition will be utilized year-round, while the hall itself will continue to accommodate programs in the warmer months.

Added Galusha, “On top of the good news comes great news: The Pasternak Family Foundation has confirmed a pledge of $50,000 towards the project, and the O’Connor Foundation has approved our $75,000 funding request!”

Expressing appreciation to these benefactors, Galusha also hailed the Nicholas J. Juried Foundation for its $100,000 gift which lifted the capital campaign in its early days. In addition, more than $100,000 has been raised from 146 individual and business donors, and a grant of $50,000 has also been pledged by the State of New York.

Noted Galusha, “While we have the funds to get started on the project, we cannot be sure of the ultimate cost of construction materials, furnishings, fixtures and landscaping. So we will renew the Capital Campaign to be sure we are not caught short.” To donate or become a member, visit mtownhistory.org

Two new trustees have joined the HSM Board to work on this project and others.

Alana Siegel completed an undergraduate degree in Language and Literature at Bard College, worked at Station Hill press in Barrytown, and then moved to San Francisco where she devoted much of her time to experimental education projects and events. From 2016 to 2019, she completed a classical three-year Buddhist retreat. Alana helped organize the reincarnated New Kingston Whoop-de-Doo in August.

Michael Fairbairn was born in the old Margaretville Hospital, grew up in the Hudson Valley and graduated from Kingston High School. He hails from a long line of Fairbairns and portrayed one of them – Niles Fairbairn – in HSM’s very first Living History Cemetery Tour in 2012. He has also been a re-enactor of French and Indian, Revolutionary and Civil War soldiers.

While welcoming the new trustees and thanking members of the HSM Board for their work in guiding the organization, Galusha especially noted the contributions of outgoing trustee Amy Taylor who is departing the Board after eight years of service. Others on the Board are Doris Warner, Pat Moore, Josef Schoell, Agnes Laub, Barbara Moses, Linda Armour and Gary Smith.

“Because of the actions of this group of remarkable people and a cadre of enthusiastic volunteers, HSM can list several activities and accomplishments over the past year,” Galusha said. Six programs drew a wide spectrum of participants, from metal detecting enthusiasts who attended the 6th Annual Relic Hunt, to nearly 100 people who braved inclement weather for the 9th Living History Cemetery Tour. Farm boarding houses and the life and work of photographer Irene Fay were spotlighted. HSM also coordinated a day of family fun at the Old Stone School and hosted a railroad hike on the famous Horseshoe Curve in Highmount.

Treasurer Pat Moore presented a summary of HSM finances, noting that several repairs and improvements were made to the hall this year, including installing a new concrete floor.

HSM continues to accept items for its growing collection of historic materials. Those with Middletown-related items to donate are invited to contact Collections Chair Barbara Moses.

Those gathered for the annual meeting then heard Rebecca Rego Barry’s entertaining program, “Rare Books Uncovered: Stories of Fantastic Finds in Unlikely Places.”

To conclude the afternoon, which featured a luncheon catered by Mary’s Cookin’ Again, the winning ticket for the raffled “Catskills in a Basket” was drawn. Tina Greene of Arkville was the lucky winner!

Rare books program October 22

A family Bible worth $350,000. A first-edition classic found at a flea market. A 500-year-old German book of woodprints stored under a bed for 40 years. Mark Twain’s personal book collection, many with penciled comments, questions and witticisms, stashed in barrels in a California garage.

These and other remarkable biblio-tales will be the featured program at the Historical Society of the Town of Middletown’s Annual Meeting and Luncheon Saturday, Oct. 22.

Rebecca Rego Barry author of “Rare Books Uncovered: True Stories of Fantastic Finds in Unlikely Places” will speak at the Margaretville Fire Hall on Church Street in the village. The meeting begins with lunch at Noon, catered by Mary’s Cookin’ Again, followed by a business meeting and Rebecca’s presentation.

Reservations ($20) are required by October 15 and can be made by calling 845-586-3630.

Rebecca Rego Barry is the editor of Fine Books & Collections, a quarterly magazine for booklovers. Her writing on books, history, and culture has appeared in SmithsonianFinancial TimesLiterary HubCrimeReadsAtlas ObscuraLapham’s QuarterlyThe GuardianSlateArt & Object and other publications.

Her chapter on the literary Warner Sisters appeared in From Page to Place: American Literary Tourism and the Afterlives of American Authors (University of Massachusetts Press, 2017).

Rebecca graduated from Syracuse University with a dual bachelor’s degree in English and magazine journalism. She earned a master’s degree in book history from Drew University where she then served as the preservation and archives associate in charge of the university archives. She also took additional courses at the American Antiquarian Society and at the University of Virginia’s Rare Book School.

Rebecca lives in Chichester where she and husband Brett Barry run the audio production company “Silver Hollow Audio.”

 

 

 

New Kingston photographs of Irene Fay Oct. 1

The Historical Society of the Town of Middletown will revisit a unique time in New Kingston Valley history, one documented by photographer Irene Fay, in an illustrated talk Saturday, Oct. 1 at 3 p.m. at the New Kingston Presbyterian Church.

“World of my own: The New Kingston photographs of Irene Fay” focuses on the residents and landscapes of this Middletown hamlet where the artist lived from the 1960s through the 1980s. It was a period in which long-time locals were welcoming urban newcomers who were purchasing homes and farms as summer and weekend retreats. A number of those newcomers were, like Irene Fay and her husband Stefan, European Jews who had fled the Holocaust and World War II and who found a measure of peace in the bucolic Catskills.

Irene Fay was born in Russia, raised in Germany and escaped from Poland. She trained with eminent photographers in Switzerland and emigrated to New York City in 1948. After becoming a US citizen in 1954, Irene worked as a freelance photographer. From 1937 to 1984, she created an estimated 3,000 privately commissioned studio portraits.

In 1962, Irene and Stefan purchased a Thompson Hollow farmhouse in New Kingston where she found inspiration and many willing subjects for her camera. Irene once said, “Perhaps it is my dream to possess a perfectly arranged miniature world of my own, always at my command.”

A large collection of her New Kingston images is preserved at Fenimore Art Museum in Cooperstown, which has provided HSM with 50 photographs to be shown at the October 1 presentation. Irene’s history and the stories of some of those she photographed, will inform the slide show.

The public is most welcome to this event. Admission is by donation.