Going National, Going Global, Staying Local — 2018 Highlights / 2019 Plans
/We’re excited to share some highlights of our work at Prison Public Memory Project from 2018 as well as some of our plans for 2019.
Read MoreWe’re excited to share some highlights of our work at Prison Public Memory Project from 2018 as well as some of our plans for 2019.
Read MoreWe’re pleased to announce the launch of a new, publicly-accessible digital archive of historically significant prison records from our prison memory sites.
Read MoreThe Hudson Prison Memory Project (HPMP) in Hudson, NY, a member site of the national Prison Public Memory Project, is proud to announce the formation of a community advisory committee.
Read MoreHibberd will share her practice as an interdisciplinary artist working with historical sites of institutionalization and incarceration outside the United States.
Read MoreFounder/Director Tracy Huling and Hudson (NY) Site Coordinator Brian Buckley recently received the Grinnell College Joesph F. Wall '41 Alumni Award.
Read MoreOn Wednesday, October 14, 2015 the Prison Public Memory Project and Hudson Area Library will be hosting an illustrated talk and discussion about “street kids” in history and in Hudson.
Read MoreIn this excerpt from the article, "Redesigning a Prison Town," Huling urges the creation of local ‘sites of prison memory' in communities that host prisons.
Read MoreThree different days in July, 2015, the Prison Public Memory Project is holding pop-up museums in three different locations in Hudson, NY.
Read MoreEmily Hainze, Public Humanities Fellow at Columbia University's Heyman Center, speaks about her collaboration with the Prison Public Memory Project.
Read MorePrison Public Memory Project collaborator Russ Immarigeon was awarded a research fellowship from the New York State Archives in support of his ongoing research into the history of the New York State Training School for Girls in Hudson, NY.
Read MoreAward-winning author Geoff Ward is talking at the Hudson Area Library on August 8th, 2013 about "Black Child Saving Along the Hudson: The New York Movement, 1930-1980."
Read MoreThe Prison Public Memory Project uses public history, art, and new media to engage communities in conversation about the roles of prisons in society.