People's History of Wall Street Walks

People's History of Wall Street Walks Join us for walks in Manhattan's financial district, from The Wall to Liberty Square, telling the story of American capitalism from the People's POV.

This tour will blast through the mystique of this infamous street, allowing us to see past the grand institutional facades of the financial district and lay bare the lies, injustice, and fraud committed on Wall Street since Day One.....and every day. We begin at the Museum of the American Indian, where we'll hear how the land itself was stolen from the Lenape Indians by the Dutch West India Compan

y. We'll then walk along Wall Street to hear how big business has historically cloaked their theft of both private and public funds both physically -- in large buildings of Neo-Roman columns -- and in their operations, by using a complicated language and operating procedures. DURATION: There are two walk options, one lasting 2.5 hours, and the other, 3.5 hours.

1. For the shorter walk, we'll walk for two hours and conclude with a half hour reflection on it all, at Zuccotti Park....And by the end, maybe we'll even gain a better understanding how to free ourselves of Wall Street's grip!

2. The longer walk includes more respite and contemplation along the way, accompanied by a more participatory process at several of the stops. [BRING: One nice, fresh, vegetable.]

The nature of this participatory process will be revealed as we walk, inspired by The Legend of Turtle Island:

“Sky Woman fell down to the earth. The earth was covered with water. The animals tried to swim to the bottom of the ocean. They swam to reclaim the soil, to re-fashion land. Muskrat went the deepest, he succeeded in gathering earth. He placed it on the back of a turtle, and this turtle grew into the land known today as North America, or Turtle Island. Later, the Ancient Ones, the Real People, the Lenape who remembered the End and the Beginning, shared this legend with one another, and they named the island at the center of today's New York City, Manahatta.”

Like muskrat, we will strive to find some grounding, for the good of all. Collectively, our societies are nearing the point of breakdown and breakthrough, in ways both destructive and restorative. Many of us have become so unmoored and rootless, we have lost our sense of what is ours in Common. One of the beautiful things that this breakdown will reveal, is that we need each other. In other words, our mutual survival will depend upon mutual leadership. Shared leadership comes when we see the value in the unique contributions of others. This breakdown has the potential to be a “leveler” that makes visible our equal worth,
leading us to value once more the vast contributions that people without a monopoly on access to media and/or money can offer. Through this walk, we root our very concept of “The Commons”, from our soles, up. ABOUT THE WALK LEADER(S): The walk leaders are a range of Occupy Wall Street activists with backgrounds in law and public history. Rebecca Manski currently coordinates this project, joined by a rotation of Occupy Wall Street-related activists. Rebecca is a current Educator at the Tenement Museum, a former Occupy Wall Street press team member, and a long-time Communications specialist working with non-profits from the Midwest to the Middle East. SPACE IS LIMITED. Please RSVP @: [email protected]

Day-of contact: (312) 725-2014

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Labor Day was promoted by the Central Labor Union and the Knights of Labor. The Knights of Labor was a populist labor organization promoting the 8 hour day, with strong connections with the Free Masons.

After the Haymarket Massacre, which occurred in Chicago on May 4, 1886, U.S. President Grover Cleveland feared that commemorating Labor Day on May 1 could become an opportunity to commemorate the affair. Thus, in 1887, it was established as an official holiday in September to support the Labor Day that the Knights favored.

The very first Labor Day was held on a Tuesday, September 5, 1882, in New York City, as ten thousand workers marched in a parade starting just above Wall Street, from City Hall to Union Square.

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From freshwater pond to dumping ground. From Paradise, to Columbus Park.Today it's Columbus Park, in Chinatown. But it's...
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From freshwater pond to dumping ground.
From Paradise, to Columbus Park.

Today it's Columbus Park, in Chinatown. But it's originally one of the centers of gravity for the Lenape nation, the village of Werpoes, on the southernmost pond at the southern tip of Manahatta. Thousands live at its southwestern edge. The Dutch colonists build a wall to keep the Lenape out of Fort Amsterdam, but this means that they cut off their access to the main source of freshwater for Lower Manhattan.

Then Africans move here, to the periphery of the Dutch and English colonial settlement. The Dutch call the land on the other side of the ramparts wall that becomes Wall Street, 'Land of the Blacks'. They offer "half-freedom" to the Africans willing to till the land beyond the Wall and to ward off the Lenape.

By the early 1700s, the village of Werpoes, once thousands strong, is obliterated, and the Lenape are slaughtered down to 200 throughout the whole of Manahatta from Long Island to Brooklyn. Werpoes now becomes the site of the first Free African settlement in New York.

The colonists tear down the wall, and now they have regular access to the freshwater. The English construct a promenade and recreation ground on the bluffs around the shoreline where once the Lenape grew crops and baked the clams they collected from the sea.

Soon, it becomes a wastewater pit called the Collect Pond, contaminated after factories are constructed around its rim. A cholera epidemic ensues, and it corresponds with the arrival of waves of Irish Americans. A simple correlation is made - the Irish must have a tendency towards cholera, perhaps they brought it with them.

A major effort is made to preserve the area, by filling in the Collect and constructing Paradise Park. But Paradise Park quickly turns to little more than marshy infill, spongy, soupy. The Protestant Founders abandon the area for the north, once and for all. Those lacking the means to move out, stay behind, and the area becomes an Irish and African neighborhood known as Five Points.

Five Points comes to be known as the worst slum in the world, and its residents are stigmatized. What was briefly Paradise Park is more known for nearby Murderer's Alley.

At night, Africans spilling out of the saloons around the marshy park are doing the hustle, and Irish spilling out of the pubs are doing the jig, and at the center of that park, a new danceform is being created: tap dancing.

When Italians move in, the park is known as Mulberry Bend. Then Columbus Park. Today, elders living in Chinatown sit year-round playing mah jong, Chinese checkers, string instruments. And they take shelter from the rain under the Works Progress Administration shelter built by workers during the Depression.

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Little Syria was a significant landing place for Arab emigrants, hosting a literary movement featuring the likes of Kahlil Gibran and Ameen Rihani, an early theorist of Arab nationalism. It flourished for nearly a century, until it vanished under the WTC jackhammers in 1967.

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JOIN US THIS SUNDAY, June 14th! 12:30 PM, for a Participatory Wall Street Walk starting at Bowling Green, as we tell the...
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JOIN US THIS SUNDAY, June 14th! 12:30 PM, for a Participatory Wall Street Walk starting at Bowling Green, as we tell the story of American capitalism from the People's point of view. Space is limited, so please RSVP: [email protected]

Together let's undo the mystique of this infamous marketplace, from the foundations of the United States at Federal Hall, to its crumbling under Tammany Hall.

We'll remember the process by which a private corporation, the Dutch West India Company, first expropriated the lands of the Lenape Indian nation. We'll excavate the Wall against which abducted Africans were sold by the day or the week. We'll consider the ways the Gilded Age was a precursor to 21st Century collusion between corrupt economic and political actors.

And most importantly, we'll unearth sites of resistance, finishing at the site of the most recent uprising in the Wall Street area. Occupy Wall Street is not the first movement to rise up against injustice and greed. It won't be the last.

At four of the stops, the walk leaders will lead you in a participatory process, revealed as we go. Through this walk, we will be rooting our very concept of “The Commons”, from our soles, up. Many of us have become so unmoored and rootless, we have lost our sense of what is Ours. But our mutual survival depends upon an understanding of what it is that belongs to us all in Common.

DURATION: Come on out for two hours of time travel followed by about three quarters of an hour of in-the-now reflection and discussion. We'll reflect alone, and in pairs at stops along the way, and finish with a circle at Liberty Square...And by the end, maybe we'll even gain a better understanding how to free ourselves of Wall Street's grip!

*Rain or shine so long as it's over 70 degrees (barring a climate catastrophe)
*Day-of contact: (414) 979-9255

Contribution: BRING a fresh vegetable
FREE/By donation (to cover cost of printed materials)

http://www.salon.com/2013/09/17/wall_street_a_history_of_occupation_partner/

It's been happening for centuries

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