Thursday, October 20, 2005

Albany N.Y. and The Beat Generation

Cultural icon Jack Kerouac referred to the month of October as the time of year when everything returns to the earth. It's also the month in 1969 that the celebrated literary
figure died.

Since his passing, his work, along with the contributions of contemporaries William
Burroughs and poet Allen Ginsberg, is recognized every October in communities around the country with concerts and readings from their work.

Kerouac, Burroughs and Ginsberg form the cornerstone of the "Beat
Generation," a literary movement that would influence the counterculture's seismic influence
of the 1960s and '70s. Today, their legacy can be felt with a new generation that has reinvented the poetry reading and the coffee bar.

Kerouac, Burroughs and Ginsberg also have their own histories with the Capital Region.


Delmar Connection


Jack Kerouac's second wife, Joan Haverty, was born in Queens in 1931 and later relocated upstate with her family to 7 Bothwick Ave. in Delmar.
Haverty and her brother grew up in a single-parent home, supported bytheir mother,
Violet, who worked as assistant floor manager at a men's clothing store in downtown Albany.

As a teen, Joan befriended Schenectady resident William Cannastra, one of two sons
born to a wealthy, aristocratic mother and a machinist-by-trade father who had emigrated
from Italy.

The Cannastras lived on Schenectady's Pennsylvania Avenue, a tree-lined street in the
shadows of the Mount Pleasant ballfields.
Young Bill, who had the yearnings of a career in the art world, insteadplacated his parents
by studying at Harvard Law School.
In the summer of 1949, when he moved to New York City to further pursue his studies,
Haverty went with him.

The pair shared an apartment in New York's Chelsea District, where serious daytime studies were said to alternate with wild and raucous post-midnight parties with other young friends that included Kerouac and Ginsberg.

After one particularly wild night of drunkenness in October 1950 that included Kerouac
and Lucien Carr, Cannastra's horseplay in the wee hours at the Bleeker Street subway station resulted in his death. Dangling precariously outside the window of a moving subway car,
he was unable to get back inside as the train rumbled into the tunnel. He was struck by
a girder and killed instantly.

Cannastra was later immortalized in a number of works by those who knew him, including a poem by Allen Ginsberg titled "In Memorium: William Cannastra, 1922-1950";
in his legendary "Howl"; and by Kerouac, who identified him as "Finistra" in "Visions of Cody."

Shortly after Cannastra's death, Kerouac moved in with Haverty, and the two soon wed on Nov. 17, 1950. For Thanksgiving, they hitchhiked from Manhattan to Delmar to share the happy news of their coupling with Haverty's mother.

Upon his return to Manhattan, Kerouac resumed working on the story of his road travel journeys with friend Neal Casady. During an especially frenetic three-week creative spell
fueled by benzedrine, Kerouac sat at his typewriter in February 1951, and banged out
his epic novel "On The Road."
He did so at the couple's West 20th Street apartment on a 120-foot roll of Cannastra's
old tracing paper that he had scotch-taped together, piece-by-piece so as to be
unencumbered with the mind-dragging thought of changing paper.

Kerouac and Haverty's marriage dissolved months later, and in late 1951, the 21-year-old Haverty, pregnant with Kerouac's child (one that he would always publicly deny was his), returned to her mother's Delmar apartment.

"A baby girl born in Albany, New York, says `Mommy' for the first time," wrote
Jan Kerouac in her 1981 novel, "Trainsong."
Father and daughter met only twice, briefly. Jack died in 1969 at age 47. Jan died in 1996
in New Mexico, succumbing to recurring health problems. Joan died in 1990.


Burroughs and Loudonville

Burrough's wife, Joan Vollmer, grew up at 21 North Loudon Heights, just off Route 9 in Loudonville. Vollmer's was a privileged existence, growing up among English Tudor-styled homes and rose- manicured lawns.

She attended St. Agnes school in Albany, and left home in 1942 to attend Barnard College
in New York City.
Vollmer roomed with Edie Parker, who would become Kerouac's first wife. She met
and quickly married a law student, Paul Adams. After he was drafted into the service,
she had an affair with a Columbia student that resulted in a child, Julie, born in 1943.

Vollmer convinced Adams the child was his, and after spending the summer in Loudonville, Vollmer moved back to New York and resumed rooming with Parker.
Through Parker and Kerouac, Vollmer met Burroughs, whom she became immediately
involved with and would settle into a common-law marriage. They had a son, Billy Jr.
They also shared a literary bond and a penchant for addictive drugs.

William was addicted to heroin, Joan to benzedrine. In September 1951, while living
in Mexico City, the couple indulged in a dangerous game.
Sitting on a couch with gun in hand, William attempted to shoot a champagne glass
off of Joan's head. The gun misfired and she was killed instantly.

Two days later, the Times Union headline read "Ex-Loudonville Girl Shot To Death
at Mexico City Party; Husband Accused."
The article featured an innocent looking Joan, draped in an old St. Agnes graduation cap
and gown.
A sinister looking Burroughs appeared in a separate photo in a dark suit.

Burroughs was detained in Mexico City for a year by authorities but never confined to jail.
Two years after the incident, Vollmer's death was ruled accidental. The children were split up.

Julie went back to Loudonville, where she was raised by her maternal grandparents, and
Billy went to St. Louis to live with his father's parents.
Billy, whose life would be plagued by alcohol and substance abuse throughout, penned two novels: "Speed" and "Kentucky Ham" in the 1970s.
He died in 1981. Julie was raised in the Capital Region, and her whereabouts are unknown.

As for William Burroughs, who died in 1997 at age 83, the death of his common-law wife
was a determining factor in his career:
"I would never have become a writer but for Joan's death," he said, "(it) brought me
in contact with the Invader, the Ugly Spirit, in which I have no choice except to write
myself out."


Ginsberg in Albany

"Albany throwned in snow. It's winter, Poe, upstate New York scythed,"
begins Ginsberg's 1969 poem "To Poe: over the Planet, Albany-Baltimore."

He spent a considerable time journeying through the Capital Region en route to his four-bedroom farmhouse outside Cherry Valley, 80 miles west of Albany.

While on his way to Kerouac's funeral in 1969, as the entourage passed by Colonie's
Memory's Garden Cemetery, Ginsberg scribbled:
"Cemetery near Albany Airport glimpsed on way to Jack Kerouac's funeral in Lowell."

It was published as Ginsberg's farewell poem to his friend, "Memory Garden."

by Thomas Dimopoulos
published in the Albany Times Union, Oct 25, 1998.

2 Comments:

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