Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Uncle Sam Trail Inaugural Tour April 10th

George Jacques and the Uncle Sam Memorial Foundation have announced the upcoming inaugural tour of the newly created Uncle Sam Trail on April 10th. A special shuttle will begin and end at the Italian Community Center. Kathy Sheehan, RCHS Registrar and County Historian, will be leading the tour, relating the story of Sam Wilson's life and his legacy in Troy.

You can rsvp to:
Joyce and John Musco at 518-237-4446 or Marjorie Mahar DerGurahian at 518-235-8109 or joyce052@aol.com

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Troy honors Uncle Sam

This article by Tom Caprood at the Troy Record gives some of the history on the importance of Uncle Sam to Troy and the City's annual celebration:

September 13, 2009 TROY — Today is Uncle Sam’s 243rd birthday.

A small crowd of local officials and area veterans gathered at Oakwood Cemetery Saturday for the 51st annual memorial celebration in honor of Sam Wilson, the local man who a national symbol of American pride was based on.

Former City Councilwoman Marjorie Mahar DerGurhian led the ceremony, which discussed how city officials and local supporters of Uncle Sam were able to convince government officials in Washington to have Troy recognized as the official home of Uncle Sam.

Marty Mahar, DerGurhian's father, who passed away in 2007, had emceed the event nearly every year since its inception in 1959.

DerGurhian noted that the city was beginning another 50 years of honoring Uncle Sam and his legacy.

“Uncle Sam became our nation’s symbol because he was industrious, kind, generous, and he was very involved in his community,” said DerGurhian. “Certainly in that spirit that led a committee of veteran’s in 1959 to petition Congress to recognize Samuel Wilson of Troy, N.Y. as the original Uncle Sam.”

She went on to describe how a group known as the Veterans for Uncle Sam organized to have Sam Wilson’s gravesite commemorated as a national shrine in 1958 and how they continued on various trips to Washington to have the city recognized as the home the national symbol and war hero.

While the official public ceremony did not begin until 1959, the group of veterans began laying a wreath on the gravesite in 1958 before the area became a shrine, a practice that individuals from the Korean War Veterans Association and the New York Society of Sons of the War of 1812 carried on during the memorial ceremony.

A resolution recognized Troy as the home of Uncle Sam passed on Sept. 15, 1961.

“We became the home of Uncle Sam even though there were a number a number of other cities throughout the country vying for the same title,” said DerGurhian. “Because of these people, we — Troy, N.Y. — got that designation.”

Read more here.

They want YOU at Uncle Sam exhibit

Times Union's KENNETH C. CROWE II highlighted the recently opened Uncle Sam exhibit at RCHS:

From a chamber pot to kitsch, the facts and legends that surround Uncle Sam will be depicted in a new permanent exhibit at the Rensselaer County Historical Society.

"The legend of Uncle Sam. The history of Uncle Sam. The Rensselaer County Historical Society is the perfect place to be the guardian of Uncle Sam," said Andrew Marietta, interim executive director.
The historical society at 57 Second St. is building the exhibit from the roughly 250 Uncle Sam artifacts in its collection and pieces from the Uncle Sam Memorial Foundation that were displayed at City Hall.

The exhibit's opening runs from 5 to 7 p.m. Wednesday.

The factual story begins with meatpacker Samuel Wilson, who is the officially recognized inspiration for the iconic Uncle Sam characterization that embodies the United States around the globe.

It's Wilson's chamber pot that will be displayed.

Read more: http://www.timesunion.com/ASPStories/story.asp?StoryID=862378#ixzz0X8NRQY1m