Rhode Island news
09:25 AM EDT on Monday, August 15, 2005
UXBRIDGE, Mass. -- Time hasn't yet found this place.
Journal photo / Steve Szydlowski The Algonkuin Theatre Co. performs Shakespeare's Othello recently at the River Bend Farm in Uxbridge, Mass.
Lush willows droop over a glassy canal. Someone drifts by in a canoe,
his paddle across his lap. Even the insects seem a trifle sluggish.
The Blackstone River and Canal Heritage State Park was made for drowsy
banjos and soft ballads.
On a recent Sunday afternoon, a six-piece string band set up shop on the
bank of the canal and crooned songs of timeless themes: love, war and
country.
More than 100 people dotted the hill near the River Bend Farm Visitors
Center. They knitted sweaters and read bestsellers, sitting cross-legged
on blankets or reclining in lawn chairs.
No one was in a hurry.
The Heritage String Band ("we play all the hits of the 1850s, 60s, and
70s") was in town as part of the park's free summer concert series,
which features mostly Blackstone Valley musicians and veers heavily
toward Irish, German and American folk music. This year, the series also
included four performances of Shakespeare's Othello.
"You won't find heavy metal here," said John Pelczarski, the park's
supervisor. "This park is for passive recreation. It's more passive
music, too."
The series -- now in its eighth year -- highlights the music and culture
of the immigrants who shaped the Blackstone Valley, Pelczarski said.
There's a preponderance of Celtic music on the schedule, representative
of the Irish workers who dug the 46-mile canal, which paralleled the
Blackstone River.
The canal, which opened in 1828, was for 20 years the best way to get
produce and lumber from Worcester to Providence -- until the Providence
& Worcester Railroad filled in most of it, and put it out of business.
The Heritage String Band sang songs from the canal's heyday, many of
them familiar from grade school, such as "Skip to My Lou" and "My Old
Kentucky Home." They also played homesick ballads and cheeky reels from
the Civil War era. The fiddle swooped, inviting dancers; but the crowd
preferred to sit back and sing along.
"These songs all tell a beautiful story, and there are no dirty words in
them," said Whitinsville, Mass., resident Ed Quigley, dressed in an
embroidered vest and a black derby hat.
Quigley helped form the band about five years ago; now, it actually has
groupies, he said.
"I was doing Civil War reenacting and playing around the campfire, and I
decided to take the music out to the public," he said. "I never thought
it would connect the way it has. It's patriotic music; it makes people
proud to be American."
Audience members, mostly Massachusetts residents, said the series also
gave them a way to connect with other people.
"Society went through an age where you didn't know your neighbors," said
Northbridge, Mass., resident Betty Smyth, curled up comfortably on the
grass. "People are starting to realize you need to know your neighbors.
I see it coming back, and it's great."
The string band launched into a recitation of Lincoln's Gettysburg
Address and a medley of patriotic music; one member announced, "If you
don't know at least one of these songs, you should be ashamed of
yourself." The crowd stood for "God Bless America," then gathered the
blankets and lawn chairs.
"It's almost educational," said Uxbridge resident Carole Rogers, as she
walked to her car. "You can't hear singing like this anywhere else."
Her husband, Mike Rogers, added, "In Boston, you'd have to be
politically correct. You can't mention God and country at the same time.
Here, you can do that."
How to get there
The event: Blackstone River & Canal Heritage State Park
features free concerts from June through September, each Sunday at 3:30
p.m.
Performers play at the River Bend Farm Visitor Center, 287 Oak St.,
Uxbridge, Mass. (508) 278-7604.
Getting there: Uxbridge is in south-central Massachusetts, at
the junction of Routes 122 and 16.
From Route 146, take Route 16 east to Uxbridge Center, then turn left
onto Route 122 north.
In 1.5 miles, turn right at the traffic light onto East Hartford Avenue.
In 1 mile, turn right on Oak Street at the Tri-River Family Health
Center. The Visitor Center is in the big red barn at River Bend Farm.
The schedule: Aug. 21: Trouz Bras -- music of Celtic Brittany
Aug. 28: Pendragon -- Celtic music celebrating the Blackstone Valley
Sept. 4: Billy Bruso and Blackstone -- country, rock and blues
Sept. 11: Grandparents' Day, with the Grotto Big Band
Sept. 18: The Esquires Swing Band
Sept. 25: Blackstone Valley Community Concert Band
Events this week
Highlights of events this week along the Blackstone:
TODAY 6:30 to 7:45 p.m. Twilight Cruise TOMORROW
6:30 p.m. Arts in the Park Children's Performance Series.
THURSDAY 2 to 4 p.m. Homeschool Open House Noon to
12:50 p.m. Thursday Bag Lunch Riverboat Tour. Cruise on the
Blackstone Valley Explorer, leaving from Central Falls Landing, Broad
Street and Madeira Avenue, Central Falls. All seats $7. Minimum 15
passengers. Reservations required; call (401) 724-2200.
6:30 p.m. Thursday Night Walkabouts. Park rangers and
volunteers of the John H. Chafee Blackstone River Valley National
Heritage Corridor explore Blackstone Gorge. Contact the Heritage
Corridor at (401) 762-0440.
FRIDAY 11 a.m. Children's Summer Entertainment Series.
1 to 2:30 p.m. Friday Timeline Trekkers. Children ages 5 to 10 learn
about local wildlife and history through stories, arts, crafts and
exploration. Blackstone River & Canal Heritage State Park, River Bend
Farm Visitor Center, 287 Oak St., Uxbridge, Mass. Call (508) 278-7604 to
register. 6 to 8 p.m. 6 to 8 p.m. Lewis and Clark Discovery Campfire.
Gather with park rangers around a campfire and imagine nights on the trail
for soldiers on this historic expedition. Youths under age 18 must be
accompanied by an adult. Meet at the large picnic shelter, West Hill
Dam, 518 East Hartford Ave., Uxbridge, Mass. Call the Army Corps of
Engineers, (978) 318-8417.
SATURDAY 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Family Fun Day at Daggett Farm,
Slater Memorial Park, Pawtucket. See live farm animals and enjoy events
and activities. Pawtucket Parks & Recreation, (401) 728-0500, ext. 251.
6 to 9 p.m. 6 to 9 p.m. Colonial Tavern Night at Smith-Appleby
House Museum, 220 Stillwater Rd., Smithfield. Enjoy an evening of
Colonial-era food, song and dance with the men and women of the American
Revolution. Dinner is $20 per person, $18 for Smithfield Historical
Society members. Reservations required; call (401) 231-7363.
7:30 to 9:30 p.m. American Revolutionary War encampment. Tour
a small encampment set up on grounds of historic site. Free admission to
grounds. Small admission charged for house tour. Smith-Appleby House
Museum, 220 Stillwater Rd., Smithfield, (401) 231-7363.
SUNDAY Noon to 5 p.m. Polkabrations. 1 p.m. and 3
p.m. British Tea Tour along the Blackstone River, aboard a
British canal boat, leaving from Central Falls Landing, Broad Street at
Madeira Avenue, Central Falls. All seats $17.50. Reservations required;
call the Blackstone Valley Tourism Council, (401) 724-2200.
1 to 3 p.m. Free Sunday Concert Series. Jenks Park, Broad
Street, Central Falls. (401) 727-7425.
1 to 4 p.m. Blackstone Valley Explorer Wilderness Tour. Cruise
the river aboard 49-passenger tour boat. Public tours leaving from
Central Falls Landing, Broad Street at Madeira Avenue, Central Falls, at
1, 2, 3 and 4 p.m. $7 for adults; $6 for seniors and children. Call
(401) 724-2200.
3:30 to 5 p.m. Sunday Concerts on the Canal. Bring a lawn
chair or blanket; picnic area with grills available. River Bend Farm
Visitor Center, Blackstone River & Canal Heritage State Park, 287 Oak
St., Uxbridge, Mass. (508) 278-7604.
5 to 6 p.m. Sunday Concerts on the Common. Slatersville
Common, Route 102, North Smithfield. (401) 767-2200.
6 p.m. Sunday Evening Concert Series. Featuring local bands
and musicians performing oldies, polkas, popular music, country, swing
and Big Band tunes. World War II Park, Social Street, Woonsocket.
Woonsocket Parks & Recreation, (401) 762-6400.
6:30 p.m. Pawtucket Riverfront Concert Series, featuring jazz by
Duke Robillard. Veterans Memorial Amphitheater, Roosevelt Avenue
and Exchange Street, Pawtucket. (If raining, performance moves to the
Visitor Center, 175 Main St., Pawtucket.) Pawtucket Parks & Recreation,
(401) 728-0500.
SOURCES: Blackstone Valley Tourism Council Web site
(www.tourblackstone.com); and Massachusetts Department of Conservation
and Recreation, Division of State Parks and Recreation.
***
Keep up with the Summer on the Blackstone series, at:
http://projo.com/blackstonesummer
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