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Seneca Falls: a small town with a big legacy

(foreground) Andrew Olden and Nellie Ludemann, (background) Pam Becker and Ahna Wilson with guest host Veronica Volk on "Connections" on Thursday, August 7, 2025
Gary Pudup
(foreground) Andrew Olden and Nellie Ludemann, (background) Pam Becker and Ahna Wilson with guest host Veronica Volk on "Connections" on Thursday, August 7, 2025
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We continue our tour of the Finger Lakes with a visit to Seneca Falls – a small town with a big legacy.

Seneca Falls is home to just under 9,000 people, but it holds a major place in American history. It was here, in the summer of 1848, that a group of women gathered for tea and changed the world.

More than 175 years later, the legacy of the Seneca Falls Convention and the women's rights movement is foundational to the town's identity. But this town isn't something out of a history book. It's a living place shaped by the people who live and work there, and keep its stories alive.

Guest host Veronica Volk talks to four of those people.

In studio:

Copyright 2025 WXXI News

Veronica Volk
Veronica Volk is a Reporter/Producer for WXXI News. She comes from WFUV Public Radio, where she began her broadcasting career as a reporter covering the Bronx, and the greater New York City area. She later became the Senior Producer of WFUV’s weekly public affairs show, Cityscape. Originally from Ocean County, New Jersey, Veronica got her B.A. in Communication and Media Studies at Fordham University, concentrating on Media, Culture, and Society.
Julie Williams