Albany Architecture

Albany Architecture
Author: Diana S. Waite
Publisher: Mount Ida Press
Total Pages: 282
Release: 1993
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 9780962536816

Architects in Albany

Architects in Albany
Author: Diana S. Waite
Publisher: Mount Ida Press
Total Pages: 100
Release: 2009
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780962536861

Low Down: Junk, Jazz, and Other Fairy Tales from Childhood

Low Down: Junk, Jazz, and Other Fairy Tales from Childhood
Author: A.J. Albany
Publisher: Tin House Books
Total Pages: 186
Release: 2013-11-12
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1935639773

Wise beyond her years and hip to the unpredictable ways of life at all too early an age, A.J. Albany guides us through dope and deviance of the late 1960s and early 1970s in Hollywood shadowy underbelly and beyond. A. J. Albany's recollection of life with her father, the great jazz pianist Joe Albany, is the story of one girl's unsentimental education. Joe played with the likes of Charles Mingus, Lester Young, and Charlie Parker, but between gigs he slipped into drug-induced obscurity. It was during these times that his daughter knew him best. After her mother disappeared, six-year-old Amy Jo and her charming, troubled father set up housekeeping in a seamy Hollywood hotel. While Joe finished a set in some red-boothed dive, chances were you'd find Amy curled up to sleep on someone's fur coat, clutching a 78 of Louis Armstrong's "Sugar Blues" or, later, a photograph of the man himself, inscribed, "To little Amy Jo, always in love with you--Pops." Wise beyond her years and hip to the unpredictable ways of Old Lady Life at all too early an age, A. J. Albany guides us through the dope and deviance of the late 1960s and early 1970s in Hollywood's shadowy underbelly and beyond. What emerges is a raw, gripping, and surprisingly sympathetic portrait of a young girl trying to survive among the outcasts, misfits, and artists who surrounded her.

Albany

Albany
Author: Karen Sorensen
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing
Total Pages: 132
Release: 2007
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780738547671

Located directly across San Francisco Bay from the famous Golden Gate, the small city of Albany has a history far larger than its size would suggest. Just one-and-a-half-miles square, the Albany area has been the home of many diverse people and interests. The first inhabitants were the Huchiun Indians, followed by the Peralta family and their vast Rancho San Antonio. The Gold Rush brought new settlers and dynamite manufacturers, an incompatible pairing that could not last. Albany's population swelled after the great 1906 earthquake, when many San Franciscans moved to the East Bay. By the 1920s, new homes built by well-known developers like C. M. MacGregor attracted many more families. During World War II, Albany's population expanded yet again with the influx of shipyard workers housed at Codornices Village, now known as University Village. Albany has evolved to keep pace with modern times but also has maintained much of its small-town, familyfriendly character, a combination that makes it one of the most soughtafter locations along the East Bay shore.

An Albany Girlhood

An Albany Girlhood
Author: Huybertie Pruyn Hamlin
Publisher: Washington Park Press
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1990
Genre: Albany (N.Y.)
ISBN: 9780960546091

Albany, Capital City on the Hudson

Albany, Capital City on the Hudson
Author: John J. McEneny
Publisher:
Total Pages: 276
Release: 1998
Genre: History
ISBN:

Traces over 300 years of the city's colorful history, from Dutch farming and fur trading post to the culturally diverse, dynamic capital of one of the nation's most powerful states. John J. McEneny captures the flavor and spirit of this dynamic multi-cultural capital city with intriguing details and an introduction by Pulitzer Prize-winning author William Kennedy.

Possessing Albany, 1630-1710

Possessing Albany, 1630-1710
Author: Donna Merwick
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 330
Release: 2003-02-13
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780521533249

This book reconstructs the manifold ways by which Dutch people of seventeenth-century New York took hold of the New World. As the author reminds us, the Dutch understood themselves to be republican, urban, mobile, mercantile, and amphibious; in short, properly Dutch. She shows how the Dutch possessed the land, traded over it, surrendered it to the English, and then lived out their lives balancing a "gaze" that the conquerors had for land against their own.