Friday May 1 (May Day!)—”Hallelujah, I’m a Bum!

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The Tramp is Coming! From Punch, 1879. Courtesy the New York Public Library, [1].

Friday May 1 (May Day!)—”Hallelujah, I’m a Bum!”

First Friday at the Main Street Museum.
Opening Reception 6 - 8 p.m.,

Afoot and light-hearted I take to the open road, healthy, free, the world before me


"Henceforth I ask not good-fortune, I myself am good-fortune
Here a great personal deed has room ... The road is before us! —Whitman


I'm a man of means, by no means - King of the Road —Miller

“Tramps, Hobos, and Transients at the Edge,” Reception features readings and discussion of museum displays, jazz with the Goog Smith Trio! Cupcakes, champagne and snacks! Plus “Mopey Dick and the Duke,” original artwork by Denys Wortman showing tramps on the loose in America in the 1930s, from the archives of the Center for Cartoon Studies. Exhibits of artifacts, photos and artwork on display until August, 2009. Free admission.

What is a hobo? We're all familiar with the ragged figure with a bundle on a stick, traveling by freight train. But a more interesting question might be, "who is a hobo, and why?"

Tramps and their Cars. Denys Wortman 1930. From the collection of the Center for Cartoon Studies.

Our Tramp and Hobo Symposium begins this Friday, May 1st in a groundbreaking series of special events and special exhibits this May through September. The Main Street Museum will investigate and celebrate the American wanderer with readings, movies, concerts, cookouts, lectures and more.

The tramp, the hobo, the wanderer - the unemployed, uprooted American, or simply anyone who can't rest easy without knowing what's around the next bend in the road - have a social pedigree that runs from the wilderness and Walt Whitman's "Open Road," right through to the songs of Bruce Springsteen, and today's news headlines about migrant workers, homelessness and economic upheaval.