Hart Island (Potter's Field) tour June 15 with bus to CNYSH A tour of historic Hart Island (including Potter's Field), the Bronx, will be conducted Thursday, June 15, without charge, by the NY Correction History Society (NYCHS), through the good offices of the NYC Department of Correction (NYC DOC) and in conjunction with the June 15-17 Conference on New York State History. E-mail the NYCHS webmaster for more information and to indicate interest in participating: [log in to unmask] Before sending that e-mail, please read the information below and visit the June 15 Hart Island tour page at: http://www.correctionhistory.org/html/tourhart2a.html The morning Hart Island tour will conclude during the noon hour so state history conference participants taking the tour may attend the conference's registration and first session starting later that afternoon on Fordham University's nearby Bronx Rose Hill campus. While the tour is being arranged in conjunction with the June 15-17 Conference on New York State History, registering for the conference is not a requirement for taking part in the tour that is offered without charge. Those on the tour bus return trip who will not be participating in the conference are welcome to remain on the bus at the Fordham Bronx campus stop and will be driven back to NYC DOC's HQ in Manhattan. The June 15 Hart Island tour is just the latest in a series of activities set in motion by the New York Correction History Society initiative that seeks to recover, preserve and promote correction history in New York with the help and participation of the academic community. Former NYC Correction and Probation Commissioner Michael P. Jacobson, now a professor with John Jay College of Criminal Justice and the CUNY Graduate Center, is president of the New York Correction History Society; the current NYC Correction Commissioner, Bernard B. Kerik, its board chairman. The Conference on New York State History is an annual meeting, organized by an informal group of academic and public historians and held at different locations around the state. More than four decades after its initial incarnation, the conference continues to serve as a forum for new historical scholarship and for the discussion of related issues open to all in the New York historical community. The conference is largely self-sustaining but relies on the institutional support of the New York State Museum through its Colonial Albany Social History Project and the New York State Museum Institute for basic administrative services. Cornell University, the New York State Historical Association, and the New York State Archives are the other institutional sponsors. For information about the conference, contact Stefan Bielinski, 3093 Cultural Education Center, Albany 12230; (518) 474-6917; or at [log in to unmask] The June 15-17 conference 2000 Program and a printable Registration Form are available on the Conference on New York State History web site at http://www.nysm.nysed.gov/cnysh ------------------------- Thomas McCarthy general secretary, New York Correction History Society http://www.correctionhistory.org [log in to unmask] [log in to unmask] director of historical services New York City Department of Correction Office of Public Information 60 Hudson Street, Room 608 New York, NY 10013 212 266 1016 212 266-1597 fax