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Category Archives: Governors Island

Governors Island then and now

15 Sunday Jul 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Governors Island

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I am having my Sunday morning coffee and surfing the internet. Here is some amazing film footage of Governors Island from the 200th anniversary of the Coast Guard in 1990. Those who have been to the island will recognize many of the scenes. It is hard to believe that 1990 is now the “then” and no longer the “now.” Enjoy your Sunday.

Pic of the day

06 Friday Jul 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Governors Island

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Queen Mary 2 from Governors Island

Catching up

30 Saturday Jun 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Governors Island

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I am getting organized again after being away for the past week. Earlier I went for a walk in Greenwood Cemetery, making sure to take advantage of the shade in these heat wave conditions. There is an interconnectedness between the two places; so many soldiers who fought at Gettysburg are now interred here in Brooklyn. You see it if you know what to look for. We really luck out at Gettysburg last week with the temperatures. When you are there all you want to do is get out and explore the nooks and crannies of the battlefield. Intense heat is not conducive such activity. The entire week we were there the temperature could not have gone above 80, and with low humidity. We left bright and early yesterday morning and it was almost ninety, and well over 100 by the end of the day. No, I don’t want that authentic of a battlefield experience, thank you very much.

Going through the hundreds of email waiting for me in my inbox was this piece from the Miami Herald about Governors Island. I am glad the island is getting the nationwide recognition it deserves. It is truly a must see for people visiting the Big Apple. There are layers and layers of history to explore, along with great recreational opportunities. The cat is already out of the bag among New Yorkers. Attendance has increased year-by-year since opening to the public several years ago. You have three full months left to make it part of your summer.

(image/Manhattan skyline from atop Castle Williams)

The original New York nine

19 Tuesday Jun 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Baseball, Governors Island

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This past Saturday I was walking back to the office at Governors Island to get my lunch when I came across the ballgame being played by the New York Gothams, a group of enthusiasts who play the National Pastime according to mid-nineteenth century rules. The New York Times has more here, including some cool pics. Note the Manhattan skyline in the background. And yes, the day really was that beautiful. Make Governors Island part of your summer.

Amelia the Play

10 Sunday Jun 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Governors Island, Interviews

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This past Friday my wife and I had the pleasure of seeing an original play called AMELIA. The work is the creation of actor/writer Alex Webb, who co-stars in the two-person production with his wife, the actress Shirleyann Kaladjian. One can currently see the play in a very special place: the powder magazine within Fort Jay on Governors Island. The fort has a long, distinguished history–Confederate soldiers were held here during the Civil War–and provides a unique theater experience. I advise you to attend while you can; the play will complete its Governors Island run this coming Sunday, June 17th. Admission is free, but ticketed due to space limitations.

I first met Alex on the ferry boat to the island and he graciously agreed to sit down and answer a few questions.

What inspired you to write Amelia? Had you had an interest in the Civil War, or history in general, before undertaking this project?

I was researching a play (as an actor) THE ANDERSONVILLE TRIAL and was reading journals of prisoners of Andersonville Prison and came across the entry “Rumor has it – a woman has come in here after her man.”  I was haunted by that journal entry for years.  Who would she have been?  What kind of courage would it take – to voluntarily walk into the Civil War equivalent of a Concentration Camp.   I always thought I would try and tell a fictional version of that intriguing mystery.  AMELIA is the result.

Describe the play and the role of women as soldiers in the War of the Rebellion.

AMELIA is an epic Civil War tale of one woman’s search for her husband across the battlefields of America.  The major turning point in the play comes when Amelia must don the union blue, disguising herself as a man, in order to continue her search south for her husband.  The story culminates at the gates of the notorious Andersonville prison camp. We now know that somewhere between 400 and 500 women fought, disguising themselves as men, in the Civil War and fired muskets, took bullets and won medals.  Some did it for the signing bounty, some for their husbands, some for the cause and some because the freedom they experienced as men was intoxicating and they continued disguising themselves long after the war was over.

Explain how the project developed.

We had a very successful world premiere of AMELIA in Washington DC at The Washington Stage Guild in January of 2012.  We wanted to bring the show to NYC and at first were wrestling with the typical questions – what would be a good theatre, who might be interested in producing, etc and then I stopped for a moment and tried to think of not what was possible but what would be ideal for the show.  At that point I realized that my true wish would be to perform it in a historically significant place and offer it to the public for free.  It was at that point that I remembered the Governors Island history and connection to the Civil War (my great, great, great grandfather was a confederate prisoner in the battery not far from Governors Island at the end of the war and escaped to Manhattan for the day at one point only to be disappointed and break back into prison so he could get a square meal!) and a six-month long negotiation with the National Park Service followed.  Thank you to Ranger Collin Bell and Superintendent Patti Reilly of the National Park Service for really taking a big leap of faith with the play and agreeing to let us be in Fort Jay for so long.  It has been a true honor and great responsibility to perform on that powerful and historic ground.  I have said more than once that I feel there are ghosts watching.

As for offering it for free – I wanted to attract an audience that normally might not be drawn to a story from the past and specifically from the Civil War.  I have found – that much like people who will not watch a black and white movie – just on the principle that it is somehow not as good as a new color film.  There is a group of people who associate the history of the Civil War with stern generals in great beards and a whole lot of “dusty” history.  Of course, AMELIA is all about telling another side of the war.  Telling the history of the “lost.”  I am passionate about telling history from the perspective of the little person.  Most history is written by the powerful and is written to glorify and sometimes twist the events in their favor.  I think the greatest courage was shown by the little people the ones who lost everything to protect their respective homelands.  Most of the southerners that died fighting for the confederacy were – as many know – not even slave owners.  The history is so much more complex than the few brief moments spent on it in high school.

The play has been getting much positive press from the theater community. Has what might be the Civil War community reached out to you as well? If so, what are they saying?  I have had some contact with the Civil War community but in large part because it is fictional, perhaps, there has not been as great a turnout as might be expected from them.  I’ve had great reactions from the Civil War community members who have come through and a couple of good tips, including the fact that we needed to fix our kepi!  I really work hard on the details but somehow that one got by us until recently.

The play had its world-wide premier in Washington DC this past January. This makes sense given the centrality of the nation’s capitol during the Civil War. Now it is being produced here in New York City, at Fort Jay in the harbor. It surprises many people to know that Confederate prisoners were held this far north. Describe the setting at Fort Jay and its impact on the theater experience.

Well it has been a privilege and truly amazing.  There are two air vents/ skylights in the Powder Magazine and, depending on the time of day, sometimes an amazing natural light cue will fall upon a scene in the play.  To be on a site with such historical significance has really made us examine the story we are telling.  It demands we step up our game, reminds us what was at stake for these people, these were real lives in the balance.

Where and how can the public see Amelia? (including in the future if it is being staged after its run at Governors Island)

Well with one week left, they can go to the website www.ameliatheplay.com and sign up for free tickets for one of our four performances left.  Thursday – Sunday at 3pm.  After our run in the Powder Magazine we will see … We have had a number of inquiries for productions around the country – we’ll see what happens.  The audience and critical response has been incredible.  I am also on the fifth draft of a novel version of this story.  I think this story still has quite a bit of life in it and a lot more people out there to share it with.

(image/Fort Jay powder magazine entrance; Historic American Buildings Survey, LOC)

A picture perfect Saturday

02 Saturday Jun 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Governors Island

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It was a beautiful day at Governors Island today. Here are a few photos I took, all with my cellphone.

I took this from the dry moat in Fort Jay. It is classic Vauban-style fortification. I could not tell for certain, but I believe this a reproduction of the fifteen star flag in use during the War of 1812 . This would make sense given the history of the island.

Here is a closer look. I am going to ask about this next week.

The shadow of a Rodman gun pointing at Lower Manhattan atop Fort Jay..

The only place better than Fort Jay to get a million dollar view of the New York City skyline is Castle Williams. The forts worked in unison with others in New York Harbor to protect the city. Note the new World Trade Center rising on the left.

The Statue of Liberty, also from Castle Williams. Tours to the roof are free but ticketed due to space limitations. If you come to the island it is worth taking the time to do this. The views are breathtaking and the interpretive rangers do an amazing job explaining the history of the fortress and the island.

This is looking directly backward toward Fort Jay from the same spot as the photo above. You cannot see Fort Jay through the trees; if you look above the white building however, you will see the flag. The white building was the Coast Guard library. The CG left in 1996.

The sink is not from the Civil War period; when Confederate prisoners were housed at Castle Williams there was no running water. Yes, the bars indicate that this was indeed a jail.

Brooklyn from the ferry heading back at the end of the day. You can see the east tower of the Brooklyn Bridge on the farthest left.

Summer is underway.

Summer 2012 now in session

25 Friday May 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Governors Island, National Park Service

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Governors Island, May 2012

Hey everybody, it is Memorial Day weekend. I took the day off today to go to Governors Island for the annual island walk around. Each year just before the start of the season the Interpretation Division schedules an interpretive tour of the island with primarily other staff and volunteers serving as the audience. The purpose is to give rangers experience in front of a live audience before the opening of the island for the season. Each of about ten rangers speaks for 10-15 minutes on a certain aspect of the island’s long and rich history. It is great fun and quite informative. The rangers and volunteers are all dynamic and bring their own personality to what they do. It was especially good today because we got to see the inside of Castle Williams, which will be open to the public as of tomorrow after an extensive renovation. One will even get to visit the roof, with its million dollar views of New York Harbor. Tours of Castle Williams are free, but tickets are required. If you have never been t0 Governors Island, you are in for something special. It is even more meaningful this year with the bicentennial of the War of 1812 now upon us.

Castle Williams with Manhattan in the background

Whatever you do between now and Labor Day, make the National Park Service part of your summer.

Winter at Governors Island

03 Friday Feb 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Governors Island

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Civil War cannonballs at Battery Rodgers, Alexandria, Virginia

Governors Island is closed for the season, but there are still some goings on there even in the dead of winter. Here’s a little reminder that our national historic sites are not amusement parks but places where real people did true and amazing things: workers unearthed a 350 pound Civil War cannonball yesterday while doing some maintainence to the ferry landing . Here’s more from the Trust for Governors Island blog.

This is the real deal, folks. Hopefully we’ll see you at GOIS this summer.

(image/courtesy JK Brooks 85)

Governors Island 101

14 Tuesday Jun 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Governors Island

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Ann L. Buttenwieser, author of Governors Island: The Jewel of New York Harbor, gives us a valuable overview of the past and present Governors Island.

In a great sidebar, Ms. Buttenwieser also happens to be the person who brought the Floating Pool to Brooklyn a few summers ago.  I love New York.

Mark di Suvero at GOIS

10 Friday Jun 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Governors Island

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The Times art critic notes that

Since the city bought it for a dollar in 2003, Governors Island has evolved from a spooky relic to a postcollegiate playground to a family-friendly weekend destination.

Art has assisted the makeover. When Creative Time staged a clever group show on the island in 2009, the place still felt haunted. The artists, intervening in former officers’ residences and decommissioned military buildings, performed a kind of exorcism.

Now, with an ambitious and entirely outdoor exhibition of sculpture by Mark di Suvero, Governors Island is one step closer to becoming a proper urban park. “Mark di Suvero at Governors Island: Presented by Storm King Art Center” is the site’s most high-profile art show to date. With 11 works spanning more than three decades, it’s also the artist’s biggest New York survey since 1975.

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