Monday, January 16, 2012

Friendly Historicity

While we're on the subject of historicity, 
let me remind you of this great friend that has played a large role in mine:
Being NJ based, 
Kristen and I made sure we had time for a reunion,
and met up at this historical mill,
aptly titled 'The Red Mill'.
 We scoped out all the historicity this place had to offer--
including this one room schoolhouse--
before wandering into town for lunch,
followed by a piano pedagogy planning session over yummy chocolaty drinks in a cozy basement shop, with stone floors and roaring fireplace nearby.
By the time we parted ways
the day had joined in the historicity of the place,
with the promise that we'd keep its welcome in mind as a future meeting spot.

It was friendly, it was historific, and it was good!

Falling for these Falls

So, since I promised that there would be more of those falls, I'm here to come through.

When I was a child, my aunt taught at a school located in an old mill across the street from these falls.  Once a week, I'd go to the school for my piano lesson with her.  Hence, this view was an unquestioned piece of my childhood.

During my Paterson tour, my very excellent guide opened my eyes to just how limited a view this was, by driving me around to the other side.

This, is what we encountered there:
Astounding power,
loud, but strangely still;
frozen, but living.

Radiance,
brilliance,
authority.

 Notice how everything is coated in ice?
The ice crystals that hung in the air settled on the trees and the grass as far as they could travel,
as if to say:
we belong here.

I absorbed all of it through every one of my senses, and thought:
I do too.

Family Historicity

So, I told you that my great-grandfather worked in the silk mills, but I didn't tell you what he did.

This oversight on my part potentially allows you to know how I felt for many years, since up until a little while ago that was all I knew.  Until, that is, an extended family member gave us this book
and blew us all away.  
Full of  fabric samples
and elaborate sketches,
the book was my great-grandfather's scrapbook of all of his designs.

That's right, he designed the silk that was manufactured there,
which is completely different from what I pictured over the years, when family members would mention that he 'worked in the silk mills'.  I always--with a child's penchant for romance, and a misunderstanding of which side of the family we were talking about--imagined him hauling coal or some other grunt work like that.  

Turns out, however, that the man was a silk designing genius.
 If we return to the museum (and the genius of Marlo's explanations) we see this machine that punched the design cards,
the first draft of which you see in 'the book',
and the final product of which you see hanging to the right here.

The design was marked on the cards, 
the cards were punched, put into the machine , and
voila, historicity.

Of the family kind.

Monday, January 9, 2012

Historicity

Recently I was talking with a friend about my 'hometown' of Paterson.  Fiercely in my bones, Paterson defined my childhood; my conversation with said friend, however, revealed that I knew very little about it.  I felt--just a bit--like a fraud.  Upon arriving in NJ for Christmas I mentioned this to my father, who had some vacation days to make up.  The rest, as they say, is History.

Our first stop was Lambert Castle on the day after Christmas.
Paterson was home to the silk trade, and this castle was built as a home to one of its barons in the late 1800s.  
Designed to also be a home to his art collection,
room after room sprawled before us 
as we meandered through,
imagining what life must have been like when its owner meandered there as well.
This guy was no particular help in our quest, 
just a part of the Christmas trees and displays sprawled throughout the house as we went.

Some of my favorite discoveries:
This tree,
these antlers,
this chandelier,
this old Paterson made piano,
this view,
and this rotunda.

A few days later found my dad and I at the Paterson museum.
Paterson was a planned industrial city, where many goods were invented, improved, and produced.  The city can boast of silk production, locomotive production, plane engine production, submarine production, and Colt revolver production to name the most prominent.
Since my great-grandfather worked in the silk mills, I was particularly interested in the workings of that trade.  [What I learned was so interesting that I've decided to make it its own post--more to come!]
Brimming with information (helped along--apparently--by having worked in every building in the city, since at nearly every display he said something along the lines of 'oh, yeah, I worked in that building'), Marlo deftly explained the workings of the machines used in said silk trade,
the plane engines manufactured at--yes--a building he had worked in,
and the first submarine.
When we'd had our fill of all the museum had to tell us, we headed outside to one of the locomotives built in Paterson and used to build the Panama Canal.
There, a very nice man took our picture.
[A picture, I might point out, that solidifies once and for all my personal history: Yup, I'm his daughter.]
Next, we went across the street to Paterson's famed Great Falls, the source of its industrial power and the reason that Alexander Hamilton envisioned a thriving city in the first place.

When we were done exploring all the falls had to offer us [more to come on that too...], we hopped in the truck and my very own tour guide showed me around the city.  We found the district of old beautiful houses, built with Spanish tiled roofs and leaded glass windows.  And then, we found a house that had particular meaning in our own history:
the house my grandparents lived in until I was four.
Pastor of a city church, my grandparents lived in this parsonage just off of Broadway,
and I spent many pleasant hours in this backyard, being thrown in the air in a blanket by my young and very fun aunts.

We drove home, past the church where I spent many a childhood Sunday enraptured by the black gospel piano playing and singing that occurred there, enchanted by my very own grandfather standing in the pulpit, love for him oozing out of every pore of the people in the pews.  I marveled at how small the building is now, since in my four year old mind it stands large and looming.  I tried to take a picture, but all I got was blur.  I thought, 'perhaps it's for the best'--sometimes historicity is better remembered the way we remember it, and not the way it is today.

Regardless of the changes that time brings, I can--having made my historific tour of this place brimming with all kinds of historicity--claim without question my rightful heritage as a child of Paterson!