African American Genealogy Subject of WCMA Lecture

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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Dr. Kendra Field will present a talk titled "The Stories We Tell: Understanding the Long History of African American Genealogy" at 5:30 p.m. Friday, April 12, at the Williams College Museum of Art.
 
The lecture, in conjunction with the current exhibition "Emancipation: The Unfinished Project of Liberation," will explore the long history of African American genealogy from the Middle Passage to the present, drawing upon stories and experiences within Field's own family history. 
 
Field will touch upon the diversity of methods employed by historians and genealogists; descendants' often uneven access to the familial past—itself a legacy of American slavery; and the emergence of the recently launched 10 Million Names project.
 
Field, associate professor of history and director of the Center for the Study of Race and Democracy at Tufts University, wrote "Growing Up with the Country: Family, Race, and Nation after the Civil War" (Yale, 2018), which traced her own ancestors' experiences in slavery and the post-emancipation era. Her forthcoming book, "The Stories We Tell" (W.W. Norton), is a history of African American genealogy and family storytelling from the Middle Passage to the present.
 
The lecture is free and open to the public.

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Trees, Tall Grass Will Delineate Williamstown Dog Park

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff

The town plans to designate an 18-acre area, outlined in yellow, for off-leash dogs at the Spruces Park.
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Select Board on Monday saw regulations that will govern a fence-free "dog park" that the town plans to establish at the Spruces Park.
 
Use of the 114-acre former mobile home park on Main Street has been on the table for the Select Board for more than two years, after a failed attempt by citizens petition to amend the town's leash bylaw at the 2023 annual town meeting.
 
Last September, the board agreed in principle to a plan to designate a section of the park for dog owners to bring their pets off leash.
 
At Monday's meeting, Town Manager Robert Menicocci brought the board a set of regulations that he proposes to post for an 18-acre portion of the park that will be delineated by natural boundaries and colorful "stakes" that the town hopes will keep the animals confined and alleviate the concerns of park users who do not want to be around unleashed dogs.
 
The Spruces Park, which was obtained by the town under the terms of a Federal Emergency Management Hazard Mitigation Grant following Tropical Storm Irene, is subject to FEMA regulations regarding the installation of objects — like fences — that could impede the property's function as a regulatory floodway.
 
Menicocci on Monday showed the board a set of rules for a "Dog Area … delineated by a vegetative buffer … open for off leash dogs seasonally after the buffer has established in the spring."
 
Select Board member Matthew Neely asked if the plan is to plant a hedge row or some type of vegetative border that will help define the off-leash area.
 
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