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Upper Housatonic Valley African American Heritage
Trail
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W.E.B. and Nina Du
Bois and James Weldon Johnson at the Burghardt Homesite
in Great Barrington, 1928
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The project brings together the efforts over many years by a diverse group of local scholars,
historians, educators and community leaders to identify, preserve and share the area's rich African
American heritage. Representatives from every higher education institution in Berkshire County and
the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, as well as local historical societies, restoration sites,
African American churches, and other organizations formally came together for the first time in January
2004 as the African American Heritage Trail Advisory Council.
Soon thereafter, the National Park Service and local contributors funded the research and writing of a first draft heritage trail guide that recognizes African-Americans of national and international significance, while illuminating distinctly local people, places and events that reflect national trends. The guide tells the stories of these people, some of the places they lived and died and, events that reveal their courage and determination in the face of adversity to fully participate in all aspects of American society.
Activities in 2006-2007 include:
* inauguration of the Upper Housatonic Valley African American Heritage Trail with a motor coach tour
* publication of the 250-page African American Heritage in the Upper Housatonic Valley
* publication of a free Trail
Guide to the region's key forty-eight
sites and companion guide to Jacob's
Pillow Dance
* Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts sponsored The
Shaping Role of Place in African American Biography -- a
fifteen-month program of curriculum development in our region’s schools, culminating in a national conference
This effort of the Upper Housatonic Valley National Heritage Area
is funded by the Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities,
Massachusetts Cultural Council, National Endowment for the Arts, Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation, and others.
In addition to the heritage trail and
guidebook, the Advisory Council has undertaken:
* to
develop an African-American Curriculum for college,
high school, and elementary/middle school educators to incorporate
guide materials in local school curricula;
* to
compile a bibliography of regional sources;
* to
build upon the Berkshire Historical Society's Invisible
Community oral history project and document the largely unwritten
local history of African-Americans in the region
* to
support emerging African American heritage centers including the Col. Ashley House in Sheffield to study Elizabeth
'Mumbet' Freeman and other South Berkshire County African-Americans;
the Samuel Harrison House (Chaplain of the Massachusetts 54th
Regiment) in Pittsfield; and the W. E. B. DuBois Boyhood Homesite
in Great Barrington
Ultimately, the goal is to create a physical trail that interprets and visualizes the heritage themes that tell the story of African-Americans in the Upper Housatonic Valley. The trail and the sites it showcases will become vehicles for educational initiatives and for a fully developed program of heritage tourism-lecture series and publications on specific themes, audio tours, a web site, and signage and other amenities for on-site interpretation.
Photo: Special
Collections and Archives, W.E.B. Du Bois
Library, University of Massachusetts
Amherst. |