Racial history on display: Fulton Fryar’s exhibit

Guest-hosted by arts producer Paul Larson, this TV special and its webpage tell a relatively unknown story of racial inequality in 1950s Adirondack culture, and how memories of it resurfaced recently when a building at Seagle Music Colony in Schroon Lake, New York, faced demolition.

The building housed a young singer named Fulton Fryar. He was the first African American singer to study at the colony. In 1957 his sleeping quarters were kept separate from those of the other singers on the campus.

You may visit Fulton Fryar’s building at the Adirondack Experience in Blue Mountain Lake.

Begin your exploration here, by unlocking the secrets of Fulton Fryar’s Closet.

Extended interview with Darren Woods the Artistic Director of Seagle Music Colony. He discusses the challenging curriculum.Interview with two of the people responsible for finding Fulton Fryar’s closet a new home at the Adirondack Experience.

This webpage explores the reasons for the unequal treatment, even in a northern state, and the efforts to preserve Fryar’s sleeping quarters when the old building was about to be destroyed. Viewers may learn what role architectural experts, museum curators and concerned citizens are playing to make sure Fulton Fryar’s story will now be better known instead of completely forgotten.

Jackie Madison, president of the North Country Underground Railroad Historical Association, shares her opinion about Fulton Fryar’s experience in the Adirondacks.

Additional interview footage with Executive Director David Kahn of the Adirondack Experience, Executive Director Steven Engelhart of Adirondack Architectural Heritage.