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Friends of the Mohawk Towpath Byway

~ …a bridge to our communities

Friends of the Mohawk Towpath Byway

Tag Archives: Story Telling

Celebrate!

20 Monday Oct 2025

Posted by Eric Hamilton in Event, Folklore, Historic Assets, Telling the Byway Stories, Volunteering

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"Mohawk Towpath Byway", recreational access, Story Telling

This year we celebrate the 200th anniversary of the opening of the Erie Canal. The Mohawk Towpath Scenic Byway parallels the Mohawk River and the Erie Canal between Waterford, Cohoes, and Schenectady. One of the strongest intrinsic values of our Byway is history. This provided an ideal opportunity to publicize the Byway and its connection to the waterway west.

Although the communities have been drumming the beat of the anniversary all year, the actual opening of the canal from Albany to Buffalo occurred in late October 1825. Major commemorative celebrations started with the construction of a replica of the Seneca Chief at the Buffalo Maritime Center several years ago. During the World Canal Conference held the last week in September the Seneca Chief, in a grand celebration left Buffalo Harbor for a re-enacted journey across the Erie Canal to New York City. Stopping at major historic canal ports along the way, the crew collected samples of water to pour in New York harbor like Governor Clinton did 200 years ago. On its journey to New York City the packet boat stopped at Schenectady on October 14 to provide tours to the public and educational field trip opportunities for local school children, bringing history to life.

Seneca Chief passes Ferry Drive in Clifton Park. – Photos by Eric Hamilton

Meanwhile, the Town of Clifton Park held a well attended Canal Festival in the hamlet of Vischer Ferry on the weekend of October 11 and 12. The weekend included a dedication of historic marker, a parade, food vending, military re-enactors, historically popular youth games, historic trade demonstrations, working canal lock model, tours of historic structures, hay rides to a historic lock, antique car show, folks songs on the Canal, a presentation by local historic artist Len Tantillo, and a stage performance of historic narrative and song The Remarkable, Irresistible Erie directed by Andy Spence.

History records that cannons were fired along the canal to signal the approach of the Seneca Chief 200 years ago and was an important way of telegraphing the opening of the original Erie Canal before the telegraph, telephone, or internet. Following suit this fall, anyone who owns a canon or has access to a historic military device put it to a constructive use! Locally a group of re-enactors of the Albany Militia gathered to fire their canon as the Seneca Chief approached Ferry Drive in Clifton Park.

The Town of Halfmoon provided Live music, picnic fair, and ceremony by noted dignitaries as the boat tied up at Terminal Road dock so the crew had a pitstop before descending the flight of the locks into Waterford Harbor. Here too, a canon was fired as the Seneca Chief moved on toward the Flight of Locks on Waterford.

The boat spent the day tied up at Waterford Harbor providing tours to the public and several large groups of school children from various Capital District schools. The crew provided educators that did an impressive job with program geared to grade school youth as they toured the interior of the Seneca Chief, planted a pine tree and explaining the perspective of indigenous people as the Erie Canal cut through native lands.

This series of events underscored the historic intrinsic value of the Mohawk Towpath Byway in a very real, tangible way where any number of lectures could never achieve. This history lesson conveyed to school children, to families, and older adults could not have been better or more appropriately conveyed.

Thank you to all of the town historians; local, regional, and state officials; along with all our volunteers for their cooperation in highlighting this milestone on the Erie Canal now as we reshape the canal’s purpose from a commercial asset that built the Empire State to a recreation asset we all can enjoy whether from shore or from the perspective on the water.

Road Rally

06 Monday Nov 2023

Posted by Eric Hamilton in Uncategorized

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Story Telling, Volunteering

A crew of three Mohawk Towpath Byway volunteers participated in a Mohawk-Hudson Region Sports Car Club of America road rally to gain experience with this type of event. Is it practical for us to do a road rally next spring to feature the Mohawk Towpath Scenic Byway. The rally we participated in this weekend was a game, tour, and adventure (GTA) that started in Halfmoon and ended in Bennington, Vermont, to pay homage to our veterans.

It was fun as a game since we were pitted against 17 other teams to accumulate up to as many as 3,600 points for various finds along the way. For example:

…we earned 27 points for finding this bell from the SS Saratoga

… and 300 points for this checkpoint at the Bennington Battlefield!

It was a tour since we went on some local and less used state roads through rural agricultural areas. How many covered bridges are there in Washington County? Each was worth 40 points!

It was an adventure to go places we were unfamiliar with and learn about some of the history that forged our nation.

Could we do this on the Byway? You can safely bet on it! Plan to join us with a minimum team consisting of a driver and a navigator, but you can fill your vehicle with others to round out a winning team on the Mohawk Towpath Byway April 14, 2024.

These photographs were taken by our team’s navigator Jeff Slater.

The Plan…

24 Thursday Aug 2023

Posted by Eric Hamilton in Byway Administration, Event, Marketing and Promotion, Partners, Telling the Byway Stories

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"Mohawk Towpath Byway", Story Telling, Volunteering

The next meeting of the Friends of the Mohawk Towpath Scenic Byway will be Sept 12 at Schenectady Distilling Company, 3304 Amsterdam Road, Glenville.  This will be a tasting open to the public.  We supply the Erie Canal related presentation, drum up an attendance of forty people, and they will provide a tasting of their products.

This will be a pleasant, relaxed departure from our usual meetings which tend to be totally focused on the Byway; the Erie Canal; and the waterway west.  I plan on bringing a power point type presentation (lots of images) of the “State of the Byway”.  

This is a kick-off of our public availability sessions on the draft Corridor Management Plan (CMP).  Sure it is a bit different than any other Byway has done it, but why not?  The “State of the Byway” summarizes sections 1, 2, and 3 of the CMP.  I will add a slide or two to show where the nearest Erie Canal features are to the Distillery (which features “36 Locks beverages”).  Here’s an approximate schedule of what we have planned:

  • 4 to 5 PM – Tour of the distillery and tasting
  • 5 to 8 PM – hors d’oeuvres 
  • 6 to 7 PM – Byway Presentation, questions, discussion, answers

From a historic perspective alcohol played an important part in building the Erie Canal. Treated municipal water, that we take for granted, was not available.  In the spirit of building public acceptance of our Byway plan, let’s relax and enjoy each other’s company as exhausted canal workers must have ended the day of moving mud and stumps to make way for what is now history?

Note that attendees are expected to make a $5 donation to the Byway on entry. Non-alcoholic beverages will be available for us tea-toddlers who are encouraged to provide car pool or rides for others!

Story Telling

16 Friday Jun 2023

Posted by Eric Hamilton in Bringing Tourists to the Byway, Folklore, Mohawk Towpath, Telling the Byway Stories, tourism experience, Volunteering

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"Mohawk Towpath Byway", Authenticity, Story Telling, Volunteering

(As published in the National Scenic Byway Foundation e-newsletter.)

As an ambassador for our Byway, the most common and often used technique is my elevator speech.  It takes about ten seconds to say, “The Mohawk Towpath Byway is a driving route between Waterford and Cohoes and Schenectady here in New York that follows the historic route of the Erie Canal and the waterway west.”

It is an attention grabber.  The first few lines of our website, an introduction to an indoor lecture, outdoor wayside tour, or the first lines on a bus tour.  It is much better than saying, “Test. Test. Is this mic on?”

What the visitor to your byway is going to remember is this personal contact and this first impression.  Make it a good one. Smile, be sincere, enthuse with body language that adds to the feeling of authenticity.  Be ready for the follow-up question like, “Is it a bike path?” Or “What’s the story here?” Or “Where’s the nearest public restroom?” Or “Do you have a map?”

Tour host and historian John Scherer narrates a story on the Mohawk Towpath Byway. Note his leaning into the audience, gesture, and enthusiasm that all add to the authenticity of the story. [ Note that John is also holding the book he authored, Images of America: Clifton Park. Tell me that doesn’t add to the authenticity!]

What is your byway elevator speech?  Can you say it in your sleep?

For help with your elevator speech visit Storytelling in Person, a factsheet in our NSBF Resource Library.

Raconteur

11 Sunday Aug 2019

Posted by Eric Hamilton in Uncategorized

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Birding on the Byway, Hamilton, Raconteur, Story Telling, The Peace Maker

Each of us needs to be a story teller when we describe the Mohawk Towpath Byway or one of the features on the Byway. We need to convey authenticity, provide a personal perspective, inject a bit of humor, if appropriate and entertain.

We have several who live within the Byway corridor who are really good at this: Russ Van Dervoort, John Scherer and Stephanie Bandosik come to mind.

With all the focus recently on birding on the Byway, I have a great deal of reverence for John James Audubon (1785 to 1851). The subject of ornithology came up recently at a Byway event and John Scherer said, “Audubon. Wasn’t he the guy that went around a couple of centuries ago shooting birds and then painting dead birds?” The comment put the life and times in perspective leaving a memorable impression on those listening.

Hamilton has been all the rage on the Byway with the production of the musical at Proctors Theater at the western end and Cherry Hill the Albany residence of Alexander Hamilton for a couple of years. My family is not of the “Virginia Hamilton” clan, but I can share the views of freedom for all. I remember Russ Van Dervoort making the comment, “Didn’t Alexander Hamilton own slaves?”

The story of the Peace Maker and the Cohoes Falls is a fascinating one. If you ask a Native American Elder who knows the story he would say quite reverently that you are not ready to hear the story …leaving me to feel that I am not worthy. Stephanie Bandosik with reverence will put your mind at ease and in a relaxing, soothing way convey the story, but it may take longer than you wish to devote to the story.

In addition to all the other demands of a good story teller, we must be a good raconteur.

The dictionary says raconteur, (rä,kän’tar), is a person who tells anecdotes in a skillful and amusing way. The word comes from early 19th century from the French “raconter” meaning to relate or recount. I realize that I have been pronouncing the word, or at least the last syllable incorrectly by making it sound like “tour”.

Try your hand at story-telling and see if you can bring your audience back for more! Be a bit of a raconteur.

Officers:

Paul Olund, President
Nancy Papish, Vice President
Maryanne Mackey, Treasurer
Eric Hamilton, Secretary

Board Members

Mary MacDonald
Jeffrey Slater
Lawrence D. Syzdek

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