|
The City of Albany has been
alive for almost four hundred years, growing and changing,
reflecting the people who have made it their home. From a
compact city that hugged the shore of the Hudson River, the city has
spread westward up hills and across ravines with people as they have
moved into and through it. Generation after generation of
people from around the world have come and gone, leaving subtle yet
distinct marks on the landscape of their home. While they may seem
ordinary, these have been unique communities within the larger
community of Albany. People built homes, businesses and
churches unique to themselves and their cultures. Challenges and
issues have affected peoples’ lives Living near one
another, people and their neighbors have sometimes had
distinguishing characteristics.
In the process of living
lives, people built neighborhoods. Familiar places, the
boundaries of these neighborhoods have shifted and changed,
redefined by each generation of people who have lived there.
More than twenty-nine neighborhoods have been identified in the life
of Albany, some have been as small as a city block. Some are
only a memory, while others remain an integral part of the landscape
and people of Albany. Eight well recognized neighborhoods stir
the minds of the people of Albany today:
|
|
The Albany Institute of
History & Art is exploring these eight neighborhoods of Albany
through the visual record of historic photographs. Through a
series of eight exhibitions we are presenting visual stories of
where some of the people of Albany have lived, worked, played and
the communities they built between the mid-nineteenth and the
mid-twentieth centuries. Presented by neighborhood, each
exhibition in the series consists of photographs, drawn from the
rich collections of the Albany Institute of History & Art.
The photographs presented in each exhibition will be added to this
website forming a cumulative electronic record of Albany’s
neighborhoods accessible to a wide variety of audiences.
|