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A National Park for Women’s Rights: Appendix 1. Dramatis Personae

A National Park for Women’s Rights
Appendix 1. Dramatis Personae
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Preface
  2. 1. Women and the National Park Service
  3. 2. A Radical Idea for a New Park
  4. 3. Our Women Have Made Us Famous
  5. 4. Crafting the Legislation
  6. 5. Congress Embraces the New Park
  7. 6. Liftoff for the Park
  8. 7. Alan Alda Opens the Park
  9. 8. Stanton House Sheds Her Disguise
  10. 9. The Sacred Laundromat
  11. 10. Wesleyan Chapel Reimagined
  12. Epilogue
  13. Acknowledgments
  14. Appendix 1. Dramatis Personae
  15. Appendix 2. Legislation Creating the Women’s Rights National Historical Park
  16. Appendix 3. Declaration of Sentiments from the 1848 Convention
  17. Notes
  18. Selected Bibliography
  19. Index

Appendix 1

Dramatis Personae

Presidents of the United States

  • Jimmy Earl Carter
  • Ronald Reagan

US Congress

  • Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan (D–NY)
  • Representative Jonathan Brewster Bingham (D–NY)
  • Representative Frank J. Horton (R–NY)
  • Representative Gary A. Lee (R–NY)

National Park Service Headquarters in Washington, DC

  • William Joseph Whalen, Russell E. Dickenson, William Penn Mott Jr., directors
  • Denis Galvin, deputy director; formerly manager, Denver Service Center
  • Ross Holland, associate director, cultural affairs
  • Mike Lambe, chief, Office of Legislation
  • Peggy Lipson (now Peggy Halderman), legislative specialist

National Park Service North Atlantic Regional Office, Boston

  • Herbert Cables Jr., regional director
  • Charles Clapper, associate director for planning and cultural affairs
  • Terry Savage, chief of planning
  • Judy Hart, chief ranger for legislation
  • Shary Berg, Carol Tanski, landscape architects
  • Holly Bundock, public affairs

Women’s Rights National Historical Park in Seneca Falls and Waterloo, 1982

  • Judy Hart, superintendent
  • Judith Wellman, Nancy Hewitt, historians
  • Pat Haines-Gooding, history conference manager
  • Janice Friebaum, Connie Hasto, Ann Ritter, Debbie Wolfe, rangers
  • Dorothy Duke, chair, advisory commission

Alan Alda, Actor and Benefactor

  • Alan Alda, speaker and ribbon cutter to open the park in 1982
  • Arlene Alda, wife of Alan Alda
  • Ann Mazzaro, assistant to Alan Alda

National Park Service Preservation Center, Boston

  • Blaine Cliver, chief
  • Barbara Yocum, architectural conservator

National Park Service, Denver Service Center

  • Gerald Patten, manager
  • Sharon Brown, Sandy Weber, historians
  • Bonnie Campbell, Linda Hugie, Elayne Anderson, Mark Malik, general management plan team

Design Competition for Wesleyan Chapel

  • Adele Chatfield-Taylor, design director, National Endowment for the Arts
  • Peter Smith, competition manager
  • Kathy Christie, public affairs
  • Reese Fayde, chair of jury
  • Theodore Liebman, competition adviser
  • Ray Kinoshita (now Ray Kinoshita Mann), design competition winner
  • Ann Wills Marshall, design competition winner

New York State in Albany

  • Nancy Dubner, assistant commissioner, Department of Transportation
  • Charles Breule, director, Urban Cultural Park program
  • Rad Anderson, senior staff, Urban Cultural Park program

Seneca Falls

  • Robert Freeland, village mayor
  • E. Barry Bradshaw, village deputy mayor
  • August Sinicropi, director, Urban Cultural Park
  • Bert Fortner, Phil Prigmore, planners and principals, Whole Duck Catalogue
  • Jon Lane, Lane-Frenchman Associates, management plan submitted for UCP
  • Francis X. Mahady, Economic Research Associates (ERA), economic research and analysis
  • Anne Ackerson, Ann Hermann, directors, Seneca Falls Historical Society
  • Hanns Kuttner, park activist and supporter and ranger in second summer
  • George Souhan, village and park benefactor
  • Audie Malone, real estate agent
  • Frank and Julie Ludovico, owners Seneca Falls Laundromat
  • Mary Curry, Sue Sauvageau, park activists
  • Tania Werbizky, preservationist

Waterloo

  • Kenneth Lee Pachen Jr., mayor

Stanton Foundation

  • Ralph Peters (Seattle), Stanton house owner
  • Lucille Povero, Corinne Guntzel, Suzanne Cusick, presidents

National Women’s Hall of Fame

  • Marilyn Bero, Betsy Shultis, presidents

Press Corps

  • Doug Auer, manager, radio station WSFW
  • Greg Cotterill, reporter, WSFW
  • Carol Ritter (now Carol Ritter Wright), reporter, Rochester Democrat and Chronicle
  • Jack Rosenberry, reporter, Finger Lakes Times
  • Dave Shaw, reporter, Syracuse Post-Standard
  • Martin Toombs, reporter, Auburn Citizen until June 1983, then Finger Lakes Times
  • Howard Van Kirk, publisher, the Reveille
  • Doris Wolf, reporter, Finger Lakes Times

Stanton Family Descendents

  • Coline Jenkins, great-great-grandaughter
  • Rhoda Jenkins, great-grandaughter
  • John Barney, great-grandson

Annotate

Next Chapter
Appendix 2. Legislation Creating the Women’s Rights National Historical Park
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Copyright © 2023 by Judy Hart, All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in a review, this book, or parts thereof, must not be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the publisher. For information, address Cornell University Press, Sage House, 512 East State Street, Ithaca, New York 14850. Visit our website at cornellpress.cornell.edu.
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