Anthony Birthplace Museum Opening 'Hand in Hand' Exhibit

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One of four plaster casts of the clasp between Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton will be on display at the Anthony Birthplace Museum beginning Aug. 24. Other items on display were donated on permanent loan by Nora Sabo, Anthony's great-grandniece. 
ADAMS, Mass. — The Susan B. Anthony Birthplace Museum opens the exhibit "Hand in Hand" on Thursday, Aug. 24, in celebration of Women's Equality Day. 
 
The opening coincides with the anniversary of Aug. 26, 1920, the date the U.S. Secretary of State certified the 19th Amendment, giving women in the United States, from Maine to California, the national constitutional right to vote. 
 
"On this day, over a century later, we recognize the women who led the charge to glorious victory: Susan Brownell Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton," museum President Carol Crossed said in a statement. "Their mutual leadership, their dependence on one another, and the value they placed on collaboration are portrayed in this clasped rendering of their affection for one another in their struggle to win for women the right to vote." 
 
"Hand in Hand" features a plaster cast of the famous handshake. The cast is one of only four made by Anthony and Stanton and gifted nearly 128 years ago to significant Anthony and Stanton family members and friends. 
 
Besides the plaster cast, the exhibit features Anthony's personal bank book and a letter penned by Anthony to her nephew Luther "Bert" Anthony. In it, Anthony advises her nephew in his career and offers sound, critical advice in an honest but affectionate tone, showing she was a loving and supportive aunt. 
 
Items displayed in the exhibit were donated on permanent loan by Nora Sabo, daughter of Charlotte Anthony Sabo and granddaughter of Susan B. Anthony's favorite nephew, Bert Anthony. Charlotte Sabo had a career as a voice teacher, songwriter, and folksinger, joining union organizers with her second husband, Van Tyne. Known as Charlotte Anthony, she traveled the country performing with legendary singers of the era including Leadbelly, Woody Guthrie, and Pete Seeger. She died in 2015 at the age of 97. 
 
Susan B. Anthony was born in the East Road farmhouse, now a museum, on Feb. 15, 1820. She spent much of her life fighting for civil rights, in particular the abolition of slavery and women's right to vote. She and Stanton met in 1851 and spent 50 years working, writing, lecturing and advocating together for women's suffrage. 
 
The cast was made by sculptor Meb Culbertson in 1895, when both women were in New York City to celebrate Stanton's 80th birthday. A bronze of the clasp is on display in Stanton's home at the Women's Rights National Historical Park in Seneca Falls, N.Y. 
 
The exhibit will be open to the public through the fall season. 
 
The museum is located at 67 East Road and is open Thursday through Sunday from 10 to 4; for more information: 413-743-7121 or www.susanbanthonybirthplace.com
 

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Anahata Schoolhouse is Offering a New Program for the Community

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

Howard Rosenberg opened the yoga studio in 2018 in the old school house at 201 North Summer St. 
ADAMS, Mass. — The Anahata Schoolhouse on North Summer Street is offer a new service to its yoga patrons — ayurveda.
 
"Ayurveda means the science of life or longevity and it's a 5,000-year-old traditional system of medicine originating in India. It's a universal system of medicine that applies to anybody, anywhere," said certified ayurveda practitioner Hilary Garivaltis. 
 
"It's based on nature, natural laws, and rhythms and principles of nature and understanding that we're all a part of it so learning how we fit into the world around us is so important in ayurveda."
 
Garivaltis has been a leader in ayurveda for 25 years and taught for 12 years at Kripalu Center for Yoga & Health in Strockbridge. 
 
She continues to give workshops and courses, and helps set up programs, including now at the Anahata yoga and healing arts center. This includes offering personal consultations to create customized recommendations on diet, lifestyle and habits.
 
"Ayurveda is really body care, yoga is taking care of the mind, ayurveda is taking care of the body," said Aly Sprague, Anahata's director of ayurveda and yoga programs.
 
"It's extremely individualized, so no one that comes in is going to walk away with the same recommendations, not one person, because we are all made up of varying degrees."
 
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