WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Old Ninety-Nine's Cave cover

Old Ninety-Nine's Cave

Chapter 3: INTRODUCTION
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

The narrative unfolds in the Shawangunk Mountains and Rondout Valley, weaving a local legend about an elderly member of the Delaware people who is linked to a remote cave into the daily life of a valley family and their neighbors. It traces family conversations and decisions over a valuable mining claim, outside interests seeking to develop the land, and the economic hopes tied to railroads and industry. Interlacing folklore, vivid landscape description, and community drama, the work examines tensions between tradition and progress as natural beauty, local history, and personal fortunes collide.

INTRODUCTION

Tourists in the Shawangunk region are unanimous in pronouncing it one of the most beautiful spots east of the Mississippi, and in some respects unique on this continent. Mokonk and Minnewaska need no eulogy from any pen, Sam’s Point tells its own story, while the entire Rondout Valley has a charm of its own.

It has been the author’s good fortune to have access to old books and papers relating to the local tradition of “Old Ninety-Nine.” He is said to have been the last of the Delawares in the Rondout Valley, and, excepting his death, on which tradition is silent, the account given is the one generally told.

The house of Benny De Puy is still standing and the “very spring from which old Ninety-Nine drank on his way to and from his cave” yet gushes out not far from the door.

The photographs of Sam’s Point and Margaret are by V. T. Wright. That of Reuben and others used are by A. V. Turner.

The author feels indebted to “The Four Track News and Travel Magazine” for courteous permission to reprint parts of two articles by herself that were published by them.