River City Paddlesports crews and volunteers arrive in Louisville June 9 at the end of their nine-day voyageur canoe and camping trip from Portsmouth, Ohio. The Afloat event was part of an effort to establish an Ohio River Recreational Trail.
River City Paddlesports crews and volunteers arrive in Louisville June 9 at the end of their nine-day voyageur canoe and camping trip from Portsmouth, Ohio. The Afloat event was part of an effort to establish an Ohio River Recreational Trail.

Just as one community connection flows into the next, UofL is partnering with local museums, historic sites and the downtown library to offer its scholarly expertise to the citywide 鈥淎float: An Ohio River Way of Life.鈥

Peter Morrin and John Begley, retired UofL fine arts faculty members and community arts executives, organized the yearlong celebration of the Ohio鈥檚 impact on nature, art, history, literature, economy, culture and more, especially in Louisville and southern Indiana. They started with one exhibit because they were fascinated by underappreciated Kentucky artist, writer and environmentalist Harlan Hubbard鈥檚 watercolors but then expanded their efforts to 鈥渆xplore the river that fascinated him all his life,鈥 Begley said.

鈥淎s we talked with other community groups and individuals, we found all were bound to the river in one or another way, many in multiple ways,鈥 he added.

Several museums, galleries and academic institutions are participating, and UofL faculty and staff members have volunteered to draw from their wide-ranging specialties to lecture at various venues.

鈥淭he faculty expertise at UofL has been a real boon to Afloat and really appreciated by all the institutional hosts,鈥 said Begley, also former director of UofL鈥檚 Hite Art Institute galleries.

鈥淚t provides an opportunity to showcase our excellent faculty and the relevance of their research to the community,鈥 said John Gibson, director of UofL鈥檚 Commonwealth Center for the Humanities and Society. 鈥溾橝float鈥 is the brainchild of Peter Morrin and John Begley, and CCHS is delighted to partner with them on this exciting initiative.鈥

鈥淪o far we have placed our professors at the Frazier History Museum, Historic Locust Grove, Farmington Historic Plantation, LFPL-Main Library, Falls of the Ohio State Park, with plans to arrange more faculty talks in the months to come,鈥 Gibson said.

Here鈥檚 the current lineup of participating College of Arts and Sciences speakers, topics and venues:

  • June 13 鈥 鈥淲ork Along the River Jordan: African American River Labor in the Ohio River Valley and the Development of Black America,鈥 David Anderson, English associate professor, 6:30 p.m., Farmington Historic Home, 3033 Bardstown Road.
  • June 29 and July 16 鈥 鈥淭he Fish in the Ohio,鈥 Linda Fuselier, associate dean of the College of Arts and Sciences and biology associate professor. The June talk will begin at 3 p.m. at the Falls of the Ohio State Park, 201 W. Riverside Drive in Clarksville, Indiana, and the July one will start at noon at the Carnegie Center for Art and History, 201 E. Spring St. in New Albany, Indiana.
  • Aug. 25 鈥 鈥淓merson, Thoreau and the River in American Art,鈥 John Gibson, philosophy professor and CCHS director, and Alan Golding, English professor, 2 p.m., Frazier History Museum, 829 W. Main St.
  • Oct. 24 鈥 鈥淩iver Stories: Mother Love on Slavery鈥檚 Border,鈥 Susan Ryan, English professor, 6:30 p.m. at the Louisville Free Public Library鈥檚 Main Library, 301 York St.
  • Nov. 6 鈥 鈥淭raversing Indian Diplomacy on the Ohio River,鈥 Frank Kelderman, English assistant professor, 1:15 p.m., Locust Grove, 561 Blankenbaker Lane.

Also, during the spring semester, UofL archivist and historian Tom Owen and English faculty member Sarah Strickley participated in an April 2 panel on 鈥淭he Great Flood of 1937鈥 at the Frazier History Museum.听

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