Monthly Archive: June 2018

Cruger’s Folly

Proverbial wisdom has it that each of us is the architect of our own fortune. We build our houses and dwell therein, sleeping in the beds we have made for ourselves. Yet who among...

Maurice Gans #1

In May of 1882, William Morris Davis—acclaimed geographer and avid hiker—addressed a gathering of the Appalachian Mountain Club in Boston. The subject of his talk was the geology of the Hudson Valley. He opened...

The Old County Jail

A steep, narrow street in Catskill, New York, leads to a dead end. There stands the former county jail, built in 1803. Long gone are the prison cells with their iron walls and bars...

Austin’s Glen

In one of his books on the subject of Catskill Mountain geology, the venerable George H. Chadwick paused to reflect on this place he considered his home territory: “To all of us collaborators the...

On Paths

A path or trail is an expression of relationship, an accord between those who use it—and thereby maintain it—and the region it traverses. Paths made by deer and fox express something different from those...

Marker 123

It has been said—by a scholar who studies such things—that the function of a picture postcard is to make the unnoticed noticed. If nothing else, a postcard is a kind of mailable landmark—with graffiti...

Penetrable Olana

Hoping to investigate matters pertaining to landscape and art, I drive down from the Mountaintop, cross the Hudson via the Rip Van Winkle Bridge, and arrive at Frederic Church’s place, Olana, which sits above...

Thomas Cole’s Last Mountain

The artist Thomas Cole died at home in the village of Catskill on February 11, 1848. He had just turned forty-seven years old. Even by 19th-century standards, this seems young. Consider, for example, Cole’s...