EVENTS!
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2018 Events...
Monday, January 15, 2018, the ECHO Leahy Center for Lake Champlain, 1 College Street, Burlington Vermont.
The Farm led an activity booth at the Sixth Annual Dr. Martin Luther King Community Celebration at the ECHO Center on Monday January 15, 2018. This year's theme was “Immigration,” with a special focus by the Clemmons Family Farm on the Great Migration. We launched our Great Migration Storytelling Bookmark Series celebrating our living history of the Great Migration as told through the beautiful, vibrant storytelling of Vermonters Jack and Lydia Clemmons! Each book mark has a QR code that will enable you to listen to the storytelling with your cell phone!
The Farm led an activity booth at the Sixth Annual Dr. Martin Luther King Community Celebration at the ECHO Center on Monday January 15, 2018. This year's theme was “Immigration,” with a special focus by the Clemmons Family Farm on the Great Migration. We launched our Great Migration Storytelling Bookmark Series celebrating our living history of the Great Migration as told through the beautiful, vibrant storytelling of Vermonters Jack and Lydia Clemmons! Each book mark has a QR code that will enable you to listen to the storytelling with your cell phone!
Some of our 2017 events...
October "Fall-ing for Soul Food" events on the Clemmons Family Farm: African American Culinary Heritage of Pies!
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DATE/TIME: Friday October 13, 2017, Saturday, October 14 and Sunday October 15 (check times on the sign-up information below!).
EVENTS: African American Culinary Heritage Cooking and Conversation with Chef Omar Tate. LOCATION: The Historic Barn House, at 2122 Greenbush Road, Charlotte Vermont. Free. Pre-registration is required; Maximum of 35 people. Sign up here. |
Learn about the heritage and art behind the making of three different pies that are a part of African American culinary traditions: minced pork pie, sweet potato pie and bean pie. Chef Omar Tate from New York will share samples of his pies as well as some of his knowledge and personal reflections on the place of pies in African American history and culture. There are also opportunities to enroll in a short pie-making class with Chef Omar!
Friday, October 13, 5:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. Free "cooking & conversation event" with a presentation and storytelling by Chef Omar Tate, and free tastes of three pies packed with African American history! 30 people max. Saturday, October 14, 2:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Sweet potato pie class. 8 people max. Sunday, October 15, 11:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. Bean pie class. 8 people max. Sunday, October 15, 3:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. Minced pork pie class. 8 people max. |
Tours of the Historic Barn House and its exhibits
Ethiopian/Eritrean coffee ceremonies
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DATE/TIME: Last tour of the summer is Saturday August 12 at 11 a.m. Our new schedule for Fall tours is now on Eventbrite! Sign up for tours on Sundays 2- 4 pm between September 10 - October 8 2017.
EVENT: Free tours of the historic Barn House and the "A Place for All People" exhibits are available only on scheduled days. Pre-registration is required; maximum of 15 people per tour. Select a date and sign up here. Please also visit our Exhibits page for more information. LOCATION: The Barn House at the Clemmons Family Farm. 2122 Greenbush Road, Charlotte, Vermont. DATE/TIME: Watch this space for more dates September through October 2017. We'll also post announcements for the coffee ceremony sign-ups on our FaceBook page.
EVENT: Ethiopian/Eritrean Coffee Ceremony LOCATION: The Barn House at The Clemmons Family Farm. 2122 Greenbush Road, Charlotte, Vermont. DESCRIPTION: Come enjoy the intoxicating aromas of frankincense and fresh roasted coffee prepared and served the traditional way by Alganesh Michael at our Ethiopian/Eritrean coffee ceremony. |
We'll serve you three rounds of coffee along with popcorn and dabo, an Ethiopian traditional bread. Sit back, breathe in and embrace one of Vermont's wonderful multicultural experiences! Our coffee ceremonies also include a presentation on Ethiopian culture, Ethiopian music, great conversation, and time to enjoy some of the beautiful Farm grounds with views of the Adirondack mountains and our organic farm meadows.
To ensure the quality of the multicultural experience, admission to each coffee ceremony is limited to 25 people.
Clemmons Family Farm "To Sing of Common Things" Humanities Speakers Series presents Dr. Damascus Kafumbe
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DATE/TIME: Saturday October 7, 2017. 5:00 pm - 6:30 pm.
EVENT: Tuning the Kingdom: Kawuugulu Music, Politics, and Storytelling in Buganda. Guest Speaker/Presenter: Damascus Kafumbe, PhD. LOCATION: The Historic Barn House, at 2122 Greenbush Road, Charlotte Vermont. Free. Pre-registration is required; Maximum of 35 people. Sign up here. |
The Clemmons Family Farm is honored to present Dr. Damascus Kafumbe as our next guest speaker in our Humanities Speaker Series, "To Sing of Common Things: Exploring Love, Family, Identity, Politics and Daily Life in African and African American Literature, Music and Performance”. Ethnomusicologist Damascus Kafumbe presents some of the work from his forthcoming book, "Tuning the Kingdom: Kawuugulu Music, Politics, and Storytelling in Buganda," contextualizing it in his research on and experiences with the role of musical practice and storytelling in shaping Ugandan political structures and processes.
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A multi-instrumentalist, dancer, composer, and instrument technician, Dr, Kafumbe specializes in East African musical and dance traditions. During the event, he will also demonstrate some of the use of traditional musical instruments, songs, and dances that influence political life in the country. Get ready for a highly educational, engaging, and interactive humanities event! Thanks to the generous support of the Vermont Humanities Council, this event is free. Admission is limited to a maximum of 35 people.
Farm tour for dancers and dance enthusiasts: Dream of Dancing on the Farm
DATE/TIME: Wednesday October 4, 2017. 5:00 pm - 6:30 pm.
EVENT: Dream of Dancing on the Farm. LOCATION: Meet up at Cranberry Bog House on the Farm, at 2213 Greenbush Road, Charlotte Vermont. Pre-registration is required; Maximum of 10 people. Sign up here. |
Are you a serious dancer or do you just love to watch dance? Come along with us during our walk-and-talk with Christal Brown and her students as we meet with Clemmons Family Farm owners Jack and Lydia Clemmons, tour some the Farm's historic buildings and beautiful working landscape, and explore its potential in a new dance project that is in the earliest stage of development.
“Native + Stranger” is an exciting new collaboration between two outstanding performing artists that blends dance, multiculturalism, politics, healing and much, much more- into creative expression. Christal Brown is an interdisciplinary artist who works through the medium of dance to investigate the cultural, social, and evolving discourse of humanity. Christal is also Director of the Dance Company of Middlebury and Dance Program Chair of Middlebury College, and an award-winning choreographer. Christal will be working with Rulan Tangen, whose art values movement as an expression of indigenous worldview including the honoring of matriarchal leadership, dance as functional ritual for transformation and healing, the process of decolonizing the body, and the animistic energetic connection with all forms of life on earth. She has recruited and nurtured a new generation of Indigenous contemporary dancers. Rulan is also the Director of Dancing Earth.
Brainstorm with us on ways Christal, Rulan and the Middlebury dance students could engage local community members, young and old, in a place-based investigation of self, environment, evolution and truth through dance.
This is a free and easy-going pop-up event on the Farm. To ensure the quality of our multicultural experience, we are limiting participation to the first 10 dancers (and/or those who just love to watch dance) who sign up.
Attire: Thinking caps and walking (or dancing!) shoes. We will be walking-and-talking, thinking, and possibly doing some impromptu dancing, around different outdoor and indoor areas on the Farm.
PS: Please do check out all the hyperlinks above so that you see just why we are SO THRILLED to be a part of this early phase of an amazing creative work-in-progress right here in Vermont!!!!!
“Native + Stranger” is an exciting new collaboration between two outstanding performing artists that blends dance, multiculturalism, politics, healing and much, much more- into creative expression. Christal Brown is an interdisciplinary artist who works through the medium of dance to investigate the cultural, social, and evolving discourse of humanity. Christal is also Director of the Dance Company of Middlebury and Dance Program Chair of Middlebury College, and an award-winning choreographer. Christal will be working with Rulan Tangen, whose art values movement as an expression of indigenous worldview including the honoring of matriarchal leadership, dance as functional ritual for transformation and healing, the process of decolonizing the body, and the animistic energetic connection with all forms of life on earth. She has recruited and nurtured a new generation of Indigenous contemporary dancers. Rulan is also the Director of Dancing Earth.
Brainstorm with us on ways Christal, Rulan and the Middlebury dance students could engage local community members, young and old, in a place-based investigation of self, environment, evolution and truth through dance.
This is a free and easy-going pop-up event on the Farm. To ensure the quality of our multicultural experience, we are limiting participation to the first 10 dancers (and/or those who just love to watch dance) who sign up.
Attire: Thinking caps and walking (or dancing!) shoes. We will be walking-and-talking, thinking, and possibly doing some impromptu dancing, around different outdoor and indoor areas on the Farm.
PS: Please do check out all the hyperlinks above so that you see just why we are SO THRILLED to be a part of this early phase of an amazing creative work-in-progress right here in Vermont!!!!!
Clemmons Family Farm's "To Sing of Common Things" Humanities Speakers' Series presents Dr. Brian Murphy
DATE/TIME: Saturday September 23, 2017. 4:00 - 5:30 PM.
EVENT: "I Am Not Your Meme: Social Media and the Resurrection of James Baldwin": Presentation and reading by Brian Murphy. LOCATION: The Barn House at the Clemmons Family Farm. 2122 Greenbush Road, Charlotte, Vermont. REGISTER: Sign up for this free event here. |
The Clemmons Family Farm is honored to present Dr. Brian Murphy as our next guest speaker in our Humanities Speaker Series, "To Sing of Common Things: Exploring Love, Family, Identity, Politics and Daily Life in African and African American Literature, Music and Performance”. In his presentation, "I Am Not Your Meme: Social Media and the Resurrection of James Baldwin", Dr. Murphy will share insights on the famous author's important contributions to work beyond the topics of race and racism.
Thirty years after his death, James Baldwin's essays and novels have become quite popular again. His words prophetically and poetically illuminate current events, from Ferguson and the rise of Black Lives Matter, to the election of Donald Trump and the recasting of white supremacy as the "alt-right." Memes and tweets quoting his work circulate constantly on social media, especially in the wake of police shootings and other tragic events. But what do we miss when we look at Baldwin’s art and thought only through social media and solely on his works on race, tyranny, and violence? What of his meditations on love, the challenge of freedom, the illusions of safety and security, and the fatal power of shame? Ultimately, Baldwin’s vision looked beyond racial oppression and the conflicts of our era to consider universal, timeless struggles. Even his most incisive writing on race is haunted by larger questions: if we ever manage to achieve our freedom, what will we do with it? If we survive this oppression, how will we then choose to live?
Thirty years after his death, James Baldwin's essays and novels have become quite popular again. His words prophetically and poetically illuminate current events, from Ferguson and the rise of Black Lives Matter, to the election of Donald Trump and the recasting of white supremacy as the "alt-right." Memes and tweets quoting his work circulate constantly on social media, especially in the wake of police shootings and other tragic events. But what do we miss when we look at Baldwin’s art and thought only through social media and solely on his works on race, tyranny, and violence? What of his meditations on love, the challenge of freedom, the illusions of safety and security, and the fatal power of shame? Ultimately, Baldwin’s vision looked beyond racial oppression and the conflicts of our era to consider universal, timeless struggles. Even his most incisive writing on race is haunted by larger questions: if we ever manage to achieve our freedom, what will we do with it? If we survive this oppression, how will we then choose to live?
ABOUT THE GUEST SPEAKER, DR. BRIAN MURPHY
Dr. Brian Michael Murphy is an Assistant Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies at Champlain College, an Instructor in the Kenyon Review Young Writers Workshop, and a blogger for the Kenyon Review. His poems and essays have been published or are forthcoming in Waxwing, Media-N, Birmingham Poetry Review, Ácoma, and elsewhere. As a hip hop/spoken word artist, he released the albums Manifest Destiny and Black Fire. Currently, he is writing a nonfiction book called We the Dead: Preserving American Culture at the End of the World. |
Poetry workshop with acclaimed poet Tim Sieble
DESCRIPTION: The Clemmons Family Farm is thrilled to join Sundog Poetry Center, Inc. in co-hosting a poetry writing workshop led by award-winning poet Tim Seibles. This is a unique opportunity for participants to enhance their writing skills by using 'persona' to expand the tonal range of their poetry. Dr. Seibles' own poetry approaches themes of racial tension, class conflict, and intimacy from several directions at once in poems with plainspoken yet fast-turning language.
Watch a 60-second video featuring some of Tim Seible's poetry workshop facilitation skills to help participants channel their "sense of self" into their writing here.
Tim Seibles has published five collections of poetry, most recently, "Fast Animal" (Etruscan Press, 2012). His honors include an Open Voice Award and fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Provincetown Fine Arts Work Center. In a 2010 statement he shared in the audio archive "From the Fishouse", he notes, “I think poetry, if it’s going to be really engaging and engaged, has to be able to come at the issues of our lives from all kinds of angles and all kinds of ways: loudly and quietly, angrily and soothingly, with comedy and with dead seriousness. […] Our lives are worth every risk, every manner of approach.”
WORKSHOP REGISTRATION: To ensure high-quality multicultural interactions with Dr. Seibles and other workshop participants, admission is limited to 30 people. Workshop fees are $25/person. Coffee, tea, milk/creamer, pastries or other light breakfast fare will be provided. Please contact Tamra Higgins at [email protected] to register and for more information about the workshop.
ABOUT THE ORGANIZERS: Sun Dog Poetry Center is a non-profit organization that is funded through its programs and through the generosity of individuals, businesses, and organizations. Its mission is to promote poetry as necessary to the enrichment of our cultural lives, support poets in their work and create audiences for their poetry, and provide ways to share poetry throughout the Vermont community.
The Clemmons Family Farm is one of the largest African American-owned historic farms in the state of Vermont. It is one of the 22 landmark sites on the Vermont African American Heritage Trail. Owned by Jack and Lydia Clemmons since 1962, the 148-acre Farm, with its 6 historic buildings, continues the family tradition of blending farming with the arts, the sciences, and opportunities to learn and share across religions, cultures and experiences with the local community and with visitors from near and far. Our mission is provide a welcoming place for everyone to celebrate African American heritage (past, present and future), to foster the appreciation of the heritage and cultures of all people (people of different races, ethnicities, nationalities, religions, etc), and to offer a beautiful place, full of history and meaning, for people of African descent to experience a special sense of belonging for generations to come.
Watch a 60-second video featuring some of Tim Seible's poetry workshop facilitation skills to help participants channel their "sense of self" into their writing here.
Tim Seibles has published five collections of poetry, most recently, "Fast Animal" (Etruscan Press, 2012). His honors include an Open Voice Award and fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Provincetown Fine Arts Work Center. In a 2010 statement he shared in the audio archive "From the Fishouse", he notes, “I think poetry, if it’s going to be really engaging and engaged, has to be able to come at the issues of our lives from all kinds of angles and all kinds of ways: loudly and quietly, angrily and soothingly, with comedy and with dead seriousness. […] Our lives are worth every risk, every manner of approach.”
WORKSHOP REGISTRATION: To ensure high-quality multicultural interactions with Dr. Seibles and other workshop participants, admission is limited to 30 people. Workshop fees are $25/person. Coffee, tea, milk/creamer, pastries or other light breakfast fare will be provided. Please contact Tamra Higgins at [email protected] to register and for more information about the workshop.
ABOUT THE ORGANIZERS: Sun Dog Poetry Center is a non-profit organization that is funded through its programs and through the generosity of individuals, businesses, and organizations. Its mission is to promote poetry as necessary to the enrichment of our cultural lives, support poets in their work and create audiences for their poetry, and provide ways to share poetry throughout the Vermont community.
The Clemmons Family Farm is one of the largest African American-owned historic farms in the state of Vermont. It is one of the 22 landmark sites on the Vermont African American Heritage Trail. Owned by Jack and Lydia Clemmons since 1962, the 148-acre Farm, with its 6 historic buildings, continues the family tradition of blending farming with the arts, the sciences, and opportunities to learn and share across religions, cultures and experiences with the local community and with visitors from near and far. Our mission is provide a welcoming place for everyone to celebrate African American heritage (past, present and future), to foster the appreciation of the heritage and cultures of all people (people of different races, ethnicities, nationalities, religions, etc), and to offer a beautiful place, full of history and meaning, for people of African descent to experience a special sense of belonging for generations to come.
Clemmons Family Farm "To Sing of Common Things" Humanities Speakers Series presents Ms. Eva McKend
DATE/TIME: Sunday September 3, 2017, 4:00 - 5:30 pm
EVENT: "LIVE from Vermont!" with Guest Speaker Eva McKend. LOCATION: The Barn House at the Clemmons Family Farm. 2122 Greenbush Road, Charlotte, Vermont. DESCRIPTION: The Clemmons Family Farm is honored to present Ms. Eva McKend as our next guest speaker in our Humanities Speaker Series, To Sing of Common Things: Exploring Love, Family, Identity, Politics and Daily Life in African and African American Literature, Music and Performance”. |
Admission to this event was FREE thanks to the generous support of the Vermont Humanities Council. To ensure the quality of the interactions with Ms. McKend and among the participants, admission is limited to 30 people. Please register here.
Ms. McKend co-anchors the 5:30 p.m. and 11 p.m. news shows on WCAX News. Before moving to Vermont, Ms. McKend was a reporter at the Time Warner Cable News station in the Hudson Valley region of New York. Her reporting on stories in the Greater New York City region at the 24-hour cable news channel, received national and international attention, including recognition by The Associated Press for Best Continuing Coverage and the AP for General Excellence in Individual Reporting. She is among Vermont’s first African American full-time weekday television news anchors.
In her presentation, "LIVE from Vermont!," Ms. McKend talked about her personal approach to documenting, studying and explaining the human experience in Vermont: WHOSE experience is "news" and HOW are these experiences explained. What do "performance" and "persona" mean for a television news anchor, and how are these, along with the overall field of journalism, changing over time-- from the days of Walter Cronkite to the days of Entertainment news. She will also share insights on what it means to work in the current environment of the national debate around what constitutes "real news" and "fake news". Finally, Ms. McKend highlighted the contributions of Gwen Ifful and other selected African American journalists to the field of journalism.
This event is free and is made possible through a grant from the Vermont Humanities Council.
MORE ABOUT EVA MCKEND
Since moving to Vermont, Ms. McKend has been a key community mobilizer for women of all colors, as well as a powerful role model for young African American girls around the state. She also recently volunteered her time in Cape Town, South Africa to mentor youth aspiring to careers in journalism. Before working in Vermont and New York, Ms. McKend was a Washington-based correspondent for KOLR/KOZL, a CBS affiliate in Springfield, Missouri. She interned at CNN, NBC Philadelphia, ESSENCE and Ms. magazine. She has also traveled extensively through fellowships and grants for academic opportunities in Australia, England, France, Spain, Greece, Senegal, Morocco, Brazil, China and Japan. She is a graduate of Swarthmore College and earned her master's degree from the S.I. Newhouse School of Communications at Syracuse University as a Turner Broadcasting Fellow.
MORE ABOUT THE CLEMMONS FAMILY FARM'S HUMANITIES SPEAKER SERIES
To Sing of Common Things: Exploring Love, Family, Identity, Politics and Daily Life in African and African American Literature, Music and Performance features guest speakers whose presentations highlight the contributions of selected African American and African authors, musicians and performers to the exploration of love, identity, politics and daily life through the humanities. Held between June and October 2017, the speakers' series theme is inspired by the poem “Common Things” by Paul Laurence Dunbar. The speakers series is supported in part by a grant from the Vermont Humanities Council with the support of the Peace and Justice Center.
Ms. McKend co-anchors the 5:30 p.m. and 11 p.m. news shows on WCAX News. Before moving to Vermont, Ms. McKend was a reporter at the Time Warner Cable News station in the Hudson Valley region of New York. Her reporting on stories in the Greater New York City region at the 24-hour cable news channel, received national and international attention, including recognition by The Associated Press for Best Continuing Coverage and the AP for General Excellence in Individual Reporting. She is among Vermont’s first African American full-time weekday television news anchors.
In her presentation, "LIVE from Vermont!," Ms. McKend talked about her personal approach to documenting, studying and explaining the human experience in Vermont: WHOSE experience is "news" and HOW are these experiences explained. What do "performance" and "persona" mean for a television news anchor, and how are these, along with the overall field of journalism, changing over time-- from the days of Walter Cronkite to the days of Entertainment news. She will also share insights on what it means to work in the current environment of the national debate around what constitutes "real news" and "fake news". Finally, Ms. McKend highlighted the contributions of Gwen Ifful and other selected African American journalists to the field of journalism.
This event is free and is made possible through a grant from the Vermont Humanities Council.
MORE ABOUT EVA MCKEND
Since moving to Vermont, Ms. McKend has been a key community mobilizer for women of all colors, as well as a powerful role model for young African American girls around the state. She also recently volunteered her time in Cape Town, South Africa to mentor youth aspiring to careers in journalism. Before working in Vermont and New York, Ms. McKend was a Washington-based correspondent for KOLR/KOZL, a CBS affiliate in Springfield, Missouri. She interned at CNN, NBC Philadelphia, ESSENCE and Ms. magazine. She has also traveled extensively through fellowships and grants for academic opportunities in Australia, England, France, Spain, Greece, Senegal, Morocco, Brazil, China and Japan. She is a graduate of Swarthmore College and earned her master's degree from the S.I. Newhouse School of Communications at Syracuse University as a Turner Broadcasting Fellow.
MORE ABOUT THE CLEMMONS FAMILY FARM'S HUMANITIES SPEAKER SERIES
To Sing of Common Things: Exploring Love, Family, Identity, Politics and Daily Life in African and African American Literature, Music and Performance features guest speakers whose presentations highlight the contributions of selected African American and African authors, musicians and performers to the exploration of love, identity, politics and daily life through the humanities. Held between June and October 2017, the speakers' series theme is inspired by the poem “Common Things” by Paul Laurence Dunbar. The speakers series is supported in part by a grant from the Vermont Humanities Council with the support of the Peace and Justice Center.
Lunch and conversation with Ghanaian superstar and international Tourism and Culture Ambassador Rocky Dawuni
DATE/TIME: Thursday August 10, 2017 from 1 - 3 pm.
EVENT: Lunch and conversation with Ghanaian superstar Rocky Dawuni. Born in Ghana and based in Los Angeles, Rocky has performed and collaborated with Stevie Wonder, Peter Gabriel, Bono, Jason Mraz, Janelle Monae and John Legend, among many others. Named one of Africa’s Top 10 global stars by CNN, Rocky is not "just" an Afro Rock superstar. His eloquence, cultural diplomacy and melding of music and activism have led him to become a passionate spokesperson for various global causes. He has joined forces with Product (RED), UNICEF, the Carter Center, the UN Foundation and Whole Planet Foundation to help raise funds for their initiatives to fight global poverty. In 2012, Rocky was appointed the Tourism and Cultural Ambassador of Ghana and World Ambassador for the Musicians Union of Ghana. The same year, he was named a United Nations Foundation Ambassador, alongside actress Julia Roberts and chef José Andrés.
EVENT: Lunch and conversation with Ghanaian superstar Rocky Dawuni. Born in Ghana and based in Los Angeles, Rocky has performed and collaborated with Stevie Wonder, Peter Gabriel, Bono, Jason Mraz, Janelle Monae and John Legend, among many others. Named one of Africa’s Top 10 global stars by CNN, Rocky is not "just" an Afro Rock superstar. His eloquence, cultural diplomacy and melding of music and activism have led him to become a passionate spokesperson for various global causes. He has joined forces with Product (RED), UNICEF, the Carter Center, the UN Foundation and Whole Planet Foundation to help raise funds for their initiatives to fight global poverty. In 2012, Rocky was appointed the Tourism and Cultural Ambassador of Ghana and World Ambassador for the Musicians Union of Ghana. The same year, he was named a United Nations Foundation Ambassador, alongside actress Julia Roberts and chef José Andrés.
This is a unique opportunity to spend quality time with this remarkable celebrity. A West African lunch and beverages are provided free by Cumbancha. This special pop-up event is free, however pre-registration is required and is limited to a maximum of 20 people to ensure the quality of this cross-cultural experience. Sign up here.
LOCATION: The Barn House at the Clemmons Family Farm. 2122 Greenbush Road, Charlotte, Vermont.
Donations are very appreciated to help the Farm continue to offer free events like this one to our community.
LOCATION: The Barn House at the Clemmons Family Farm. 2122 Greenbush Road, Charlotte, Vermont.
Donations are very appreciated to help the Farm continue to offer free events like this one to our community.
Loving Day Picnic
Join us on Saturday, June 24 at The Clemmons Family Farm for an all-ages multicultural family picnic in celebration of the 4th annual Loving Day Vermont and the 50th anniversary of Loving v. Virginia, the case that struck down all laws against interracial marriage in the U.S.! The event will include lawn games, a drum circle, and a time to speak out on what Loving Day means to you!
Please bring your do-it-yourself picnic items (lawn chairs, blankets, dinner and drinks, lawn games, portable instruments and bug spray)! Please also bring extra plastic or paper bags to take any trash or leftovers away with you.
Admission is free with suggested donation of $5 per person or $15 per family. Donations will go toward helping keep The Clemmons Family Farm venues available for community events like this one.
Please bring your do-it-yourself picnic items (lawn chairs, blankets, dinner and drinks, lawn games, portable instruments and bug spray)! Please also bring extra plastic or paper bags to take any trash or leftovers away with you.
Admission is free with suggested donation of $5 per person or $15 per family. Donations will go toward helping keep The Clemmons Family Farm venues available for community events like this one.
To ensure the quality of the multicultural experience of the family picnic, we are limiting attendance to a maximum of 50 people. Reserve your spot: Here
About the co-hosts:
Loving Day Vermont is part of a global network of celebrations that honor the legalization of interracial marriage, diversity and community. You don't need to be in an interracial relationship to celebrate Loving Day. Anyone who values equality can be a part of it! For more information, visit:www.lovingday.org
The Clemmons Family Farm is one of the largest historic African-American owned farms in Vermont and one of the 22 landmark sites on the State of Vermont's African American Heritage Trail. Their mission is to offer curated opportunities for visitors to celebrate the history, culture, arts and sciences of the African American and African diaspora in a magical setting. For more information, visit: www.clemmonsfamilyfarm.org
The Peace & Justice Center is a Vermont-based nonprofit membership organization. Their mission is to create a just and peaceful world. To this end, they work on the interconnected issues of economic and racial justice, peace, and human rights through education, advocacy, training, non-violent activism and community organizing. For more information, visit:www.pjcvt.org
Loving Day Vermont is part of a global network of celebrations that honor the legalization of interracial marriage, diversity and community. You don't need to be in an interracial relationship to celebrate Loving Day. Anyone who values equality can be a part of it! For more information, visit:www.lovingday.org
The Clemmons Family Farm is one of the largest historic African-American owned farms in Vermont and one of the 22 landmark sites on the State of Vermont's African American Heritage Trail. Their mission is to offer curated opportunities for visitors to celebrate the history, culture, arts and sciences of the African American and African diaspora in a magical setting. For more information, visit: www.clemmonsfamilyfarm.org
The Peace & Justice Center is a Vermont-based nonprofit membership organization. Their mission is to create a just and peaceful world. To this end, they work on the interconnected issues of economic and racial justice, peace, and human rights through education, advocacy, training, non-violent activism and community organizing. For more information, visit:www.pjcvt.org
Clemmons Family Farm "To Sing of Common Things" Humanities Speakers Series presents Ms. Donna Sherard
"The Splendiferous Adventures of Ryan Odango",
read by the author, Donna Sherard LOCATION: The Barn House at The Clemmons Family Farm DESCRIPTION: Join us in the historic Barn House at The Clemmons Family Farm to listen to author Donna Sherard read from her new children's book, "The Splendiferous Adventures of Ryan Odongo". The story is about a bicultural ‘tween, Ryan, who reluctantly travels from the United States to Kenya with his family on vacation. Soon after they arrive in a struggling Swahili beach town, Ryan realizes that saving a new friend from catastrophe is solely up to him. The clock is ticking and in order to prevent disaster, Ryan has to go on the adventure of his life and bravely come to face who he really is – his heritage and all of his quirks!
This event is supported in part through a grant from the Vermont Humanities Council. Learn more and pre-register for "Splendiferous": Here |
To ensure the quality of the multicultural experience with our guest speaker and author, we are limiting attendance to a maximum of 35 people. Admission is free but seating must be reserved in advance.