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Nyack Sketch Log: Nyack Record Shop Project

by Bill Batson
Over two dozen local African American oral histories collected by Nyack Record Shop Project volunteers in January 2018 form the basis of two upcoming events. On Saturday, September 8 at 1pm, an exhibit of images and audio will open at the museum of the Historical Society of the Nyacks. On Tuesday, September 11 at 7p, I am moderating a panel of Nyack Record Shop Project storytellers at the Nyack Library. Invest sometime at either Record Shop Project event and sample a collection of local history that represents 1,540 years of “living while black” in Nyack.
The Nyack Record Shop Project collected oral histories from the African American community for a week at Grace Episcopal Church, Main Street Beat and Meals on Wheels Nyack. The effort was launched on Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King’s Birthday – January 15, 2018 at the interfaith service commemorating Dr. King and his life’s work hosted by Dr. Frances E. Pratt, President of the Nyack branch of the  NAACP.

The collaboration was inspired by the Beacon Project an exhibit of photographs by Carrie May Weems taken in a Hudson Valley village similar to Nyack.  Oral histories that she collected in a record shop informed the series.
The project was the result of a collaboration of arts, civic, religious and local history organizations led by the Edward Hopper House Museum and Study Center and the Historical Society of the Nyack. I was invited to serve as Director.
The positive impact of the Nyack Record Shop project is underscored by the numbers: before this initiative, the Nyack Library had approximately 65 oral histories on file, and of those, only eight were of African Americans. Now there are 92 oral histories in total with 36 from the African American community. According to the 2010 census, Nyack is 23% African American.  Thus, as a result of the Nyack Record Shop Project, 30% of the archived oral histories on record are from the African American community, a rare example of social equity skewing in favor of a marginalized group.

Nyack NAACP Mid-Hudson Regional Director Wilbur Aldridge provided an oral history. Photo by Kris Burns


When Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was killed 50 years ago in April of 2018, the assassin was not just trying to silence a man, but a people.  A people who believe in freedom, and who will not rest until it’s achieved. A people who are proud of their ancestry, despite being called inferior and indolent by the dominant culture in America and Europe. A community that in Nyack has not allowed the  infamous act of a murderer with a fire arm to silence the voice of the generation who endured and overthrew the tradition of Jim Crow racial discrimination in America. We will not be the complicit in our one eradication–  if we fail to record the life story of our elders before they depart, we are finishing the job King’s assassins started.

Would you ever throw out your cell phone without downloading all the memory: phone numbers and photos, password and personal information? That’s what we do when we let our elders go to sleep without down loading their memories. Come plug into this stream of first-hand lived experience and learn about the value and vitality of local oral history. 

Bill Batson interviews Collette Fournier in the window of Main Street Beat


The oral histories collected by the Nyack Record Shop Project can also be heard at the soundcloud.

Nyack Record Shop Project Exhibit

This exhibit will share images of the 28 men and women who gave interviews in January, 2018 excerpts from the transcripts, and other documents and artifacts during the Nyack Record Shop Project. There will be a listen station where visitors can enjoy the interviews.
There will be an opening reception on Saturday, September 8 at 1p at the Historical Society Museum located in the bottom of the Depew House at 50 Piermont Avenue, directly behind the Nyack Library. The museum is open from 1p – 4p on Saturdays. The Nyack Record Shop Project exhibit is on display until October 6.

Three New John Scott Armchair Tours Illustrated Slide Presentations

The first John Scott Armchair Tours Illustrated Slide Presentations on Sept. 11 & 14 will feature the Nyack Record Shop Project. Participants Jamal Bey, Eunice Turnbull and John P. Vasser, Sr. will join me for a panel discussion to answer questions about their oral histories and to discuss their experience with the process.
The Tuesday, September 11 program will be at 7:00 p.m. at Nyack Library, 59 S. Broadway, Nyack. Registration is required, call 358-3370 x 214 All Friday programs: 2:00 p.m. at Valley Cottage Library, 110 Route 303
All programs are free. Contributions to defray costs are requested. For more information and for weather-related updates, please visit: www.nyackhistory.org or call 845. 418.4430

Upcoming John Arms programs

Thursday, October 25 and Friday 26: Andrew Goodwlie, presents History Trail rough South Nyack
Thursday Dec. 6 and Friday, December 7 Win Perry presents: What’s Happening at the John Green House?

Special thanks to Kris Burns for taking the stills that animate this exhibit and that form an important part of the digital files of the Nyack Record Shop Project and Ray Wright for printing her photos. The Nyack Record Shop was also supported by the Village of Nyack, the Historical Society of Rockland County, the Nyack Center, Kiam Records, Rand Realty, Alex Cabraie of Planet Wings, Clare and Bill Sheridan and South Mountain Studio. The collection of oral histories was made possible by the generous contribution of the time and talent of dozens of individuals. This took a village
Bill Batson is an activist, artist and writer who lives and sketches in Nyack, NY. Nyack Sketch Log: “Jeff Rubin“ © 2018 Bill Batson.  To see more, visit billbatsonarts.com 


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