Buy Hudson River Zeitgeist's 2015 Book of Interviews

This year, since April, there have been fifteen interviews published on this site. In order to ensure proper archiving and to gauge whether I can raise money to continue growing Hudson River Zeitgeist next year, I've decided to seek a short-run publishing of a book of this year's fifteen published interviews (plus two previously unpublished ones). To order the book, learn more about it or to view a video trailer for the book, please visit:

http://bit.ly/1PqmjdE

Thank you, readers. It's been a pleasure thus far.

~William Shannon

From the Horse-and-wagons to the Automobiles

I grew up just uphill from Cheviot, one of Germantown’s riverfront neighborhoods. Over the years, I often walked the family dog down to the town park and boat launch at Cheviot, an area which used to be a bustling shipping center. One usual feature of the trips was that, as the dog and I would saunter up the hill on the way back, Rita Rifenburgh would open the front door of her house, offer a piece of cake that she’d baked and we would catch up for a few minutes. Her house is perched half-way up the steep hill looking out over a gorge that a small creek carved from cascading down sets of rocks as it spills into the Hudson River.

As time’s gone on, and I’ve moved to different places, the routine’s been interrupted. But, recently, as I was again walking up the hill, she stopped the dog and I and we caught up for the first time in quite a while. I told her of the interviews I’ve been doing and, though she had a videotaped interview a couple years ago shown at the local library, I asked if she’d be willing to do another for the record. She agreed. The following is a transcription of our recent talk.

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