Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2009/04/14
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]There is very little visual evidence of the recession in New York's Hudson Valley. Sure, there is much less new home building than there was a couple of years ago and a few more day workers, possibly illegals, hanging around street corners waiting for jobs. But it is hard to photograph what isn't there. There are no protests, no riots, no storming of the state offices. No one is selling apples from a pushcart. But then we had our recession decades ago. Because of easy water transportation the Hudson River valley was the U.S. industrial heartland for almost 200 years. But with railways, highways, and air travel that no longer mattered. Locals are fond of saying that the Hudson Valley reached its economic zenith during the Civil War and it has been downhill ever since. Factories closed up or moved elsewhere. Anti-pollution legislation prohibiting industrial discharge into the river was the final straw. My area lost a big distillery, food processing plants, paint manufacturing, automobile assembly, a paper mill, brick making and cement plants. Even the Crayola crayon company left town and moved to Easton, PA. Commercial fishing for striped bass, blue crabs, and even sturgeon caviar disappeared. Further upstate, entire industries shut down. The Smith Corona typewriter plant moved to Mexico and then closed entirely. Endicott Shoes, the country's largest show factory went out of business. IBM sold its laptop computer manufacturing operation to China. Finally, the lumber industry was decimated as wooded areas were purchased and incorporated into the Adirondack "Forever Wild" state park. (Which, by the way, is three times the size of Yellowstone.) None of this was high tech but steady blue collar work. The residue of lost industrialization is easy to see but it is old news. Riverside towns such as Peekskill, Fishkill, Newburgh, Poughkeepsie and many of those along the Erie Canal are ghosts of their former vibrant self. Docks are decrepit, factories vacant, some houses old and in disrepair. They make good photo ops but it would be a fraud to pass them off as symbolic of the current financial crisis. I walked the neighborhood looking for dramatic scenes, even ordinary scenes depicting the recession, but I couldn't find any. I guess I'll go back to shooting photos of flowers and grandchildren. Larry Z