July 2014 Chronogram

Page 43

Clockwise from top left: Katy Dwyer and her daughter Maggie; Jenise, Santino, Julianna, and Johnny outside Dominick’s Cafe; Jason and Megan visit the Stockade District from their home in Ellenville; Gilat Aharon, Katie Fountain, Andrea Parker, Ally Perry, Marcy Lannis and Myah Lannis celebrate outside BSP; Jennifer Bosch and her son Tristan at the Kingston Farmers’ Market; James and Catherine Doran visit the Rondout Harbor in Kingston from their home in the Berkshires; Iggy, Hillary, Sabine, Owen, and Zoe Harvey; Yevgeniya Khatskevich and Julie Price at the Kingston Farmers’ Market.

The Stockade’s 116 houses, 103 barns, two schools, academy, 46 barracks, 17 storehouses and shops, court house, and Dutch church were all torched. But New York State’s records were safely smuggled out in the skirt of the wife of Provincial Congress delegate Christopher Tappen. Of the original stone houses, 41 were rebuilt and still stand. Over 50 American Revolutionary soldiers lie buried at the Old Dutch Church. Kingston was officially formed when Rondout Village merged with the Stockade in the early 1800s, and the mile-long road between them became what’s now Broadway. Kingston’s abundant bluestone and materials for cement and brickmaking made it an industrial center until the early 1900s, when Portland cement and bluestone won out. Kingston thrived for a time in garmentmaking and small machinery manufacturing, but was floundering when IBM arrived in 1955, bringing with it 40 affluent years. Kingston is finally discovering its vibrancy as a small city (population 23,711 in 2012), attracting artists, entrepreneurs, and millennials escaping overpriced big cities. Today Kingston has burgeoning foodie, arts, and music scenes, successful festivals, and new industries including leather goods, fashion, solar-powered boats, handcrafted furniture, and multimedia. It’s also acquired a brand of hipness, symbolized by the spray-painted red goats that appeared mysteriously uptown in 2012 (later spreading to Miami Beach, Missouri, Michigan, Canada, and, perhaps not surprisingly, Williamsburg, Brooklyn). Some saw vandalism, others saw graffiti art, but Mayor Shayne Gallo recognized the red goats as a free branding campaign (because of which, the tattooist-and-artist duo responsible for them only got community service). A marketing expert couldn’t have come up with a better symbol for Kingston. The goat, after all, is not only stubborn, but also indefatigable—like Kingston’s true believers—and red is the most vibrant color there is. These days, it finally looks like—as Kingston native and former Mercury Rev guitarist Adam Snyder titled his 2006 album set in Kingston—this town will get its due after all. Long live the red goat.

7/14 CHRONOGRAM KINGSTON 41


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