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Mission Statement
It is the mission of the Samuel Harrison Society to restore and preserve Reverend Harrison's homestead; use it as a place to teach the values embodied in his noble life, his enduring beliefs, his extraordinary writings; and to define a chapter in the story of us as a people by providing greater insight into African-American history.
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Planned Activities
Friends of the Dalton Free Public Library - May 20th, 2009.
Pittsfield 4th of July Parade - July 4th, 2009.
For these upcoming and other past events, please see our Calendar of Events.
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The Samuel Harrison House as it looks today!
The exterior work on the Samuel Harrison House at 82 Third Street was completed during the winter of 2008-2009. Interior work is expected to begin in the spring of 2009.
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4th Annual Samuel Harrison Birthday Celebration
On April 11th 2009, Samuel Harrison Society members celebrated the 191st birthday of the Rev. Samuel Harrison along with Massachusetts State Representative Byron Rushing and Youth Alive Inc. Dance-Step Team.
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Fall/Winter 2008-09 Newsletter
The Samuel Harrison Society is pleased to annouce that we have published our second Newsletter. The release of the Newsletter preceeds the 4th Annual Samuel Harrison Birthday Celebration. It is available for download here. We would like to thank our Administrative Assistant Dawn Morin for all her efforts.
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Jerry's Place
On February 5th 2009, Samuel Harrison Society members Ivan Newton, Frances Jones-Sneed, and Blayne Whitfield were guests on the PCTV cable access show Jerry's Place. View the entire show here.
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Heritage Walk
By Dick Lindsay Publication: The Berkshire Eagle (Pittsfield, MA) Charlotte Finn loves history as her background is in government and political science. The Pittsfield woman received the history lesson she was looking for yesterday afternoon during the inaugural tour of the Samuel Harrison Society.
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Groundbreaking Ceremony
By T. Dobrowolski Publication: The Berkshire Eagle (Pittsfield, MA) A freed slave, political activist, civil rights advocate and minister, the Rev. Samuel Harrison was born in Philadelphia, lived in New York, was educated in Ohio, and traveled to South Carolina during the Civil War. But Pittsfield is where the first minister of the Second Congregational Church on Onota Street felt most at home.
"No warmer friends have I had anywhere than in Pittsfield," Harrison wrote in his autobiography. That statement still applies.
Here is an article and video from Capital News 9 of Albany, NY.
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Inagural Newsletter
The Samuel Harrison Society is pleased to annouce that we have published our first Newsletter. The release of the Newsletter coincides with the celebration of the Groundbreaking at the Samuel Harrison House. It is available for download here. We would like to thank our Administrative Assistant Dawn Morin for all her efforts.
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National Register of Historic Places
The Samuel Harrison Society is pleased to announce that the home of Samuel Harrison, located at 82 Third Street in Pittsfield, was accepted for inclusion in the National Register of Historic Places on March 22, 2006. His home is a landmark representing his place in history and physically represents his lifestyle and position in his community.
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Creating a New Museum
By J. Peter Bergman Publication: The Berkshire Eagle (Pittsfield, MA) "A house on Third Street in Pittsfield, abandoned and left to decay and crumble for 20 years, is about to achieve a renaissance of sorts. Built in 1850, the house was first the home to the Reverend Samuel Harrison, a former slave who fought for the Union in the Civil War and won the right for equal pay for black and white soldiers serving in the Union Army."
Read the entire Berkshire Milestones Article.
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Pittsfield moves to save home of Rev. Harrison
City officials are predicting the Harrison house on Third Street can become a museum honoring a locally famous African-American leader, after successful overtures have been made to place it on the National Register of Historic Places and transfer its ownership. The house of Rev. Samuel Harrison, abandoned and falling into decay, was placed on a list of structures slated for destruction two years ago by a city committed to neighborhood revitalization. As a matter of routine, the city submitted the list to the Massachusetts Historical Commission for its review. The commission wrote back on Oct 21, 2002, stating that the house at 82 Third St. was a “historic and archaeological asset of the Commonwealth” and that it was eligible for the National Register of Historic Places under three separate categories of historic significance.
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Quote - April 16, 2006
Article ID: 3716480 Publication: Berkshire Eagle, The (Pittsfield, MA) "I think the Reverend Harrison would be astounded to know that his house is now one of Pittsfield's historic landmarks." — Linda Tyer, first president of the Samuel Harrison Society
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Copyright © 2004-2009 Samuel Harrison Society P.O. Box 378, Pittsfield, MA 01202
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