Hamilton Heights and Sugar Hill

RSVP Tue, Feb 18, 2025 at 6:00 PM

Fordham University Press, 2024.

This is a virtual program — online only.

In Hamilton Heights and Sugar Hill, Davida Siwisa James leads readers through four centuries of the storied New York neighborhood where George Washington headquartered in 1776, Alexander Hamilton built his country home, George Gershwin wrote his first hit, young Norman Rockwell learned to draw, and Ralph Ellison wrote Invisible Man. Her history focuses on the vibrant people and the beautiful architecture of today's landmark district, touching on The Great Migration and the Harlem Renaissance, as well as artists and luminaries who called it home, such as Thurgood Marshall, Duke Ellington, Mary Lou Williams, and W.E.B. Du Bois.

To register for this FREE program, click on the link above to RSVP. You will be redirected to Ticketstripe where you'll receive the Zoom link upon registering. The webinar is limited to 100 attendees, but will be livestreamed to our YouTube channel.

Davida Siwisa James

Davida Siwisa James lived in Morningside Heights as a child and Sugar Hill as a young woman. She has a BA in English from UCLA and attended Penn State Dickinson Law in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. She has been a university public relations director, a freelance journalist for the twice Pulitzer Prize–winning Virgin Islands Daily News, and has a twenty-year management career in performing arts finance and marketing. She has published nonfiction books, essays, poems, a play, and an award-winning short story, “The Commute.” She resides in Los Angeles, CA.

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