PBS Television presents
America's First River
Bill Moyers on the Hudson
June 9, 9:00 PM, First
Part
June 16, 9:00 PM, Second Part
In a four-hour, two part, documentary, journalist Bill Moyers travels
from New York Harbor to the Adirondack Forest to explore the history,
ecology, natural beauty, and far-reaching legacy of what has been called
Americas most beautiful, messed-up and surprising piece of
water. The catalyst for the conservation movement of the 19th century
and the environmental movement of the 20th century, the Hudson River is
a paradigm for the ceaseless conflict between Americas love of nature
and its restless growth.
Part One of America's First River introduces the seminal role
the Hudson played in the development of Americas economy, culture,
literature, art, and ideology. The program covers the Hudson in the American
Revolution, the Hudson River School of painters, the development of industry,
and the clear cutting of the Adirondack and Catskill forests.
As the 19th century drew to a close, the Hudson, found champions. John
D. Rockefeller and J.P. Morgan, bent on preserving the views from their
riverside mansions, bought up parcels of land and set them aside as parks,
protecting them from the encroachment of industry. In so doing, these
often ruthless capitalists became the unlikely founders of the American
conservationist movement. Legislation in 1885 established the vast Adirondack
and Catskill Forest Preserves. The ravaged wilderness regenerated.
Part Two of America's First River looks at the 20th century fight
to save the river from pollution, and the critical national environmental
legislation that resulted. From John Cronin, who has logged thousands
of miles on the water as the Hudson Riverkeeper, Moyers learns about the
complexity of the rivers ecology, a delicate balance of salt and
fresh water that supports an astonishing diversity of life.
By the 1960s, people all along the river started to say enough.
It started with individual citizens like Fred Danback, who worked at the
Anaconda Wire and Cable factory in Hastings, New York. He teamed up with
Robert Boyle - author, angler, and founding member of the Hudson River
Fishermans Association, one of Americas first environmental
organizations - to resuscitate an 1888 federal law that prohibited the
dumping of industrial pollution into the countrys navigable waters.
Another river lover featured in the film is folksinger Pete Seeger. Long
before it was fashionable, Seeger believed that if people were reminded
of the pleasures of the river, they would protect it. He and a group of
fellow crusaders built the sloop Clearwater.
Moyers also visits Frannie Reese, who made history when she and the Scenic
Hudson Preservation Conference fought Con Edisons plans to carve
up Storm King Mountain to build a power plant.
But just as the river was coming back to life in the 1970s, a new threat
was recognized: PCBs, an industrial chemical that had been dumped into
the Hudson for decades. Overnight, the discovery of PCBs in Hudson River
fish destroyed the local commercial fishing industry. At the heart of
the story is General Electric, whose plants on the river dumped over a
million pounds of PCBs into the Hudson. Jack Welch, the companys
former CEO, insists during his interview with Moyers that G.E. is doing
everything it can to assure a clean Hudson River. But environmentalists
argue that the key to a restored river is for General Electric to dredge
the Hudson to remove the PCBs, something the company has strenuously resisted.
David Carpenter, a professor of environmental health and toxicology at
the State University of New York in Albany, believes dredging is necessary.
The Hudson River is a dump, he says. It is a contaminated
site that is not enclosed, from which PCBs are migrating to the air, to
the water, to the sediments, and into the people. But Welch believes
G.E. is being demonized. This has become a war, he protests,
a religious war about big company polluter versus good government.
As the Moyers team finished their documentary, the Environmental Protection
Agency ordered General Electric to dredge the river, but no one thinks
the last chapter of this long-running saga has been written.
America's First River: Bill Moyers on the Hudson is a production
of Public Affairs Television, Inc. and presented on PBS by Thirteen/WNET
New York. In response to the successful premiere a year ago, Thirteen/WNET
New York will be rebroadcasting the two part series in its entirety June
9th and 16th at 9 p.m.. We hope you will watch.
New
York Times Review
April 23, 2002
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