Joe
Manning is a freelance journalist, historian and genealogist, poet, photographer and songwriter. His book, Steeples:
Sketches of North Adams (Flatiron Press
1997), is in its third printing. It has been required reading for several courses at Williams College and Massachusetts College
of Liberal Arts. He followed that with Disappearing Into North Adams (Flatiron Press 2001). His most recent book is Gig At The Amtrak (Flatiron Press 2005), a collection of his poetry.
In June 2002, Manning contributed a lengthy essay
about the social history of the River Street neighborhood in North Adams for Porches: Art and Renewal on River
Street, a book edited by the Massachusetts Museum
of Contemporary Art. His poetry has been published frequently in The Berkshire Review. He has written many newspaper
and magazine articles, ranging from travel essays to social commentary. He has received
considerable recognition for his Lewis Hine Project, an ambitious search for descendants of child laborers photographed
by Hine from 1908 to 1917. It was featured in a story on National Public Radio's All Things Considered.
Manning
created and was the advisor for several oral history programs in the North Adams public schools from 1998 to 2007. From 1998
to 2009, he helped plan and run Neighborhood EXPO, an all-day interactive celebration of North Adams neighborhoods and history
sponsored by the Northern Berkshire Community Coalition. Over the years, he has been a frequent lecturer about North Adams
history for Elderhostel programs in Western Massachusetts..
With collaborator Steve
Vozzolo, he wrote and produced I Love Baseball, an album of new songs about the game. It is included in the collection of baseball music at the National Baseball
Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York. Their song about painter Norman Rockwell, "Norman Always Knew," was recorded
by Arlo Guthrie and performed by Mr. Guthrie at Tanglewood in Lenox, Massachusetts.
Manning was born in Washington, DC, and grew up in southern Maryland. He served four years in the United States Air
Force as a medical corpsman. In 1970, he received a BA in Sociology from the State University of New York College at Cortland.
He was a caseworker for the Connecticut Department of Social Services from 1970, until his retirement in 1999. Manning and
his wife live in Florence, Massachusetts.
You
can find information about Joe’s books and I Love Baseball by
clicking "Books & CDs" above.