Carey Institute plans interactive Anti-Rent Wars experience

An Anti-Rent poster advertises a July 4, 1839 meeting. “Strike for the green graves of your sires, God and your happy homes!” it urges.

RENSSELAERVILLE — The Carey Institute for Global Good is receiving $5,000 from the New York State Council of the Arts Decentralization Program to help fund an interactive experience focusing on the Anti-Rent Wars, a historical event of local significance.

In the mid-1800s, Helderberg farmers resisted the Dutch patroon system’s rents for their lands.

The Carey Institute’s program manager, Rebecca Platel, told The Enterprise this week that the project is called “Down with the rent! A multidisciplinary exploration of the New York State’s Anti-Rent Era.” 

“It’s a telling of the Anti-Rent Wars through music, roughly historical re-enactment and participatory theater,” she said. “We use the hamlet of Rensselaerville as the stage.”

Platel said the majority of the grant money will be used to pay the program’s participating artists.

Although originally scheduled to take place over the 4th of July weekend this year, Platel said, the event will likely be postponed until August or September due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Friends of Conkling Hall, also based in Rensselaerville, received funding, too, as part of a $90,000 package administered for “community-based programming” across Albany, Schenectady, and Rensselaer counties, according to a release by the Arts Council. 

Friends of Conkling Hall could not be reached for comment.

More Hilltowns News

  • Berne-Knox-Westerlo’s $24.7 million budget, with a 3.3 percent tax increase, passed with 70-percent approval from voters, who also re-elected incumbents Matthew Tedeschi and Rebecca Miller to the board of education. 

  • The Rensselaerville Water and Sewer Advisory Committee is holding a community meeting on Thursday, May 15, from 6 to 8 p.m. at the Hilltown Commons Guggenheim Theater to get input on preferred well sites for a new public water system. 

  • The law will make it easier for residents to build accessory-dwelling units that are up to 1,200 square feet of living space, in what is at least partly an effort to keep senior citizens in the town. 

The Altamont Enterprise is focused on hyper-local, high-quality journalism. We produce free election guides, curate readers' opinion pieces, and engage with important local issues. Subscriptions open full access to our work and make it possible.