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  • Two Wednesdays/Month June-September
  • June 11 & 25/July 9 & 23/ Aug 12 & 27/ Sept 10 & 24

Unlocking the Past Speaker Series on Riverie

Quick Details

Individual ticket price per cruise

$25-$30

Membership Price

Includes 4 speaker series cruises of your choice

$ 100

Unlocking the Past Speaker Series: Navigating the Erie Canal during the first 200 years

Unlocking the Past Speaker Series on Riverie: Navigating the Erie Canal during the first 200 years

This series takes an in-depth dive into the values, customs, ideas, and creativity that were sparked by the opening of the Erie Canal and the impact this waterway had on the individual and on the collective society of upstate NY and beyond. We will have educational presentations along with hands on art cruises to create a better understanding of what canallers did during long days traveling along the canal.

Date Start time (90 minute cruise) Presentation Topic Presenter Presentation Description
6/11/25 5:30 PM Friends of Mt Hope Cemetery Nancy Uffindell, Genealogist and volunteer of FOMH Cemetery Many permanent residents of Mount Hope Cemetery have connections to the Erie Canal. Owners of basins and boatyards, aqueduct builders, boat captains and people who traveled on the canal will be the focus of these presentations.
6/25/25 5:30 PM Pathway of Resistance: The Erie Canal and the Underground Railroad

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Derrick Pratt, Director of Education at the Erie Canal Museum This constantly evolving talk examines the experience of African-Americans along the Erie Canal Corridor, with a particular focus on the struggle for abolition. While parts of this story are unpleasant, slavery, racism, and resistance are critical to understanding our society today.
7/9/25 5:30 PM Friends of Mt Hope Cemetery

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Nancy Uffindell, Genealogist and volunteer of FOMH Cemetery Many permanent residents of Mount Hope Cemetery have connections to the Erie Canal. Owners of basins and boatyards, aqueduct builders, boat captains and people who traveled on the canal will be the focus of these presentations.
7/16/25 5:30 PM Fee Brothers & The Erie Canal: A History of Spirits

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Jon Spacher, CEO & Owner of Fee Brothers There’s a rich history of the intersection of spirits and the Erie Canal. 161-year old Fee Brothers was part of this history before prohibition. Learn from the 5th generation owner how these paths crossed and then went their separate ways as part of the canal’s 200 year anniversary!
7/23/25 5:30 PM TBD
8/13/25 5:30 PM Friends of Mt Hope Cemetery

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Nancy Uffindell, Genealogist and volunteer of FOMH Cemetery Many permanent residents of Mount Hope Cemetery have connections to the Erie Canal. Owners of basins and boatyards, aqueduct builders, boat captains and people who traveled on the canal will be the focus of these presentations.
8/27/25 5:30 PM Aileen O’Malley’s Journey on the Erie Canal

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Marilyn Higgins, Erie Canalway National Heritage Corridor Volunteer A recently published historic fiction book by Marilyn Higgins, “Dreams of Freedom, an Irishwoman’s story of love, justice and a young nation coming apart” covers the abolition movement, native displacement, women’s movement, and religious fervor of the Canal corridor from 1830-1865.
9/10/25 5:30 PM Friends of Mt Hope Cemetery

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Nancy Uffindell, Genealogist and volunteer of FOMH Cemetery Many permanent residents of Mount Hope Cemetery have connections to the Erie Canal. Owners of basins and boatyards, aqueduct builders, boat captains and people who traveled on the canal will be the focus of these presentations.
9/14/25 3:30 PM Friends of Mt Hope Cemetery

(Walking tour available at Mt Hope Cemetery prior to cruise-Register through their website)

Walk:

FOMH Tour Events Calendar

Cruise:

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Nancy Uffindell, Genealogist and volunteer of FOMH Cemetery Many permanent residents of Mount Hope Cemetery have connections to the Erie Canal. Owners of basins and boatyards, aqueduct builders, boat captains and people who traveled on the canal will be the focus of these presentations.
9/24/25 5:30 PM The Strategic and Military Implications of the Erie Canal

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Michael Brown, Associate Professor of History at RIT When in 1817 New York passed legislation to build the Erie Canal, anyone older than 54 would have been able to point to a map of its proposed route and recall that three wars had been fought in that area in their lifetime. It may have seemed possible, if not likely, that another conflict was only a matter of time. While the Erie Canal is most often remembered for its economic, social, and engineering dimensions, the military and strategic context of the canal is also crucial. As authorities in British Canada quickly recognized, a canal represents a redrawing of the map, and they undertook their own sweeping military engineering projects in response. Considering the military implications of the Erie Canal situates it in a larger history of strategic constructed waterways. The Suez and Panama canals and the Intracoastal Waterway are successors to the Erie Canal in affecting the geopolitical calculus of their eras.