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Camp History!

James E. Van Peursem founded the Stephen Collins Foster Music Camp
sixty-five years ago in the midst of the Depression. Balding,
mustachioed, and wiry, "Mr. Van" (as contemporaries called him)
exuded an impish charm when he smiled or a pugnacious will when the
occasion demanded. And nothing demanded in Mr. Van's opinion more
pugnacity than to find in 1936 a solution to the problems he faced
as chairman of the Departm ent
of Music at the small and unpretentious Eastern Kentucky State
Teacher's College in Richmond, Kentucky. As chair of the music area,
Mr. Van was constantly faced with the reality that the music
programs in the public schools of the Commonwealth were sparse and
often did not produce the trained young musicians needed to develop
a strong program at the college level. As a result, Mr. Van founded
the Stephen Collins Foster Music Camp following the concepts
promulgated a year earlier with the founding of the famous
Interlochen Music Camp. The concept was simple: Teenage musicians
would be invited to campus where college faculty could instruct them
with lessons and provide them with performance experiences in band
and orchestra; the campers would return to their homes and help
improve the local school program; high schools would graduate better
musicians who, in turn, would enter college and thus improve that
program; the college would graduate higher caliber music educators
who would secure positions in county schools, and onward and upward
the ascending spiral would go!
Thus, in the summer of 1936 the camp opened for the first season with
Henri Schnabl, a former member of Kaiser Wilhelm's personal band as
camp director. With Prussian rigor, Schnabl handled the 100 or so
energetic and active teenagers during a five-week summer camping
period. Mr. Schnabl continued as camp director until 1940 when Mr.
Van took personal charge of the camp. Experiences in the early days
included concert band, orchestra, small ensemble and private lesson
opportunities as well as social activities such as a 30 minute,
early morning period of marching. Violinists and other string
players who had signed up for orchestra were not exempt from this
stimulating early morning activity! Mr. Van served as Camp Director
from 1940-1963 followed by Nick Koenigstein, 1964-1967, Dr. Robert
Hartwell from 1968-1999, and since 1999, Dr. Joseph Allison.
One of the factors which permeates the Stephen Collins Foster Music
Camp is the number of students returning year after year to attend
the camp. It is not unusual for students to enter the camp as a
sixth grader to attend the Middle School Instrumental Camp and to
find that student attending the High School Instrumental Camp five
or six years later! Certainly, one of the reasons campers return is
because faculty and staff are picked for their patience in dealing
with teenagers as well as for their proficiency in music.
Occasionally, this tradition of kindness and warmth has been
augmented by the nonhuman realm. Between 1948 and 1964 every Foster
camper was greeted by the wag of a tail or a watery lick from the
music department's mascot, named appropriately, Mozart, whose grave
is located immediately behind the outdoor pavilion used for many
concerts and named after the founder of the camp, Mr. James E. Van
Peursem.
The fact that even the local mascot (a dog named *Mozart!) carried
the name of a famous composer highlights the longest and strongest
tradition associated with Foster -- MUSIC! The original concept of
the camps has been expanded and modernized to fit today's young
musicians. But, the spirit and the purpose of the Stephen Collins
Foster Music Camp remains the same outstanding musical experiences
for the young musicians of the Commonwealth and surrounding states.
Why not make your summer a Foster summer?
*Mozart is buried behind the pavilion stage!
What
are you waiting for...Join in on the Fun and be a part of the
tradition!
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