Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Education Note: Sewing with Astrida at The Sewing Tree

Astrida with Victorian garments from the UNH Museum Bowen Collection


The Sewing Tree is excited to offer the 2nd in a series of Historical Embellishment Techniques.   The class is taught by Astrida Schaeffer who specializes in hand stitching techniques.  These techniques are sure to take your sewing to another level.


Astrida Schaeffer (www.schaefferarts.com) has been making reproduction historical clothing since 1986 and custom museum mannequins since 1998. Her mannequins have appeared in museums across New England and have been published in several books as well as Costume in Performance, 2007 Historic Fashions Calendar. She has sewn for Strawbery Banke Museum, Plimoth Plantation, the American Independence Museum, and the Pavane Renaissance Dance Ensemble, among others, and is in the process of writing a book on 14th century clothing. As soon as that's finished she has plans for another on Victorian embellishment.

This series of classes will be held on Saturday, November 12 and 19 from 1-4 p.m. at The Sewing Tree in Dover, NH.


Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Education Note: Spring 2012, UNH: Studies in Regional Material Culture


Gen. Fitz John Porter's Field Glasses, Manassas Battlefield State Park. Photo courtesy, Brian Smestad



I am pleased to be teaching at UNH in the History Department again this spring.

772/872 STUDIES IN REGIONAL MATERIAL CULTURE

Exploration of current methodologies and "best practices" employed by those involved in the study, interpretation, and display of material culture objects both within and outside a
contextual setting. In addition to lectures, focus will be on specialized readings from contemporary periodicals and guest lecturers in archaeology, building preservation, costume history, maritime trades, and so on. 

For further information on course design, see www.matcultmuse.blogspot.com.
W 5:10-7:00 
HORT 445 
PROF. KIMBERLY ALEXANDER

Event Note: Ellis Boston Antique Show Gala to Benefit Ellis Memorial

The proceeds from the Ellis Boston Antique Show, Thursday October 20th, go to support 
Ellis Memorial, Boston’s first settlement house, which has been caring for children, disabled adults, and families who live and work in the South End and adjacent neighborhoods since 1885. Ellis offers high quality educational, social, and health support services to individuals and families in need within safe, nurturing and diverse environments.


Ellis Memorial & Eldredge House was founded in 1885 as part of the Settlement House movement. Throughout its rich and varied history, Ellis Memorial has remained true to its mission. Today, Ellis Memorial operates as a non-profit social service agency with programs at 66 Berkeley Street, 95 Berkeley Street, One Chandler Street, Tent City, and Madison Park Village. The following timeline tracks some of the ways in which one settlement house has altered its services and structure to meet changing times and needs while staying true to its original mission of serving neighbors in the South End community.


For additional information and to purchase tickets, go to www.ellismemorial.org

Monday, October 10, 2011

Research Note: Haverhill, NH.


An Overview: Haverhill, NH
Settled by citizens from Haverhill, Massachusetts, the town was first known as Lower Coos. Founded in 1763 by Colonel Johnston, a leader in the French and Indian War; his house still stands on Route 10. In 1773, Haverhill became the county seat of Grafton County. As the terminus of the Old Province Road, it connected the northern and western settlements with the seacoast. The town was the seat of North Country government, and as such, court sessions were held in February and May with most of the local homes serving as taverns for out of town dignitaries and guests, including, not surprisingly, Daniel Webster.
 Webster is known to have stayed at the Bliss Tavern, just steps from the Courthouse.  Haverhill Corner, as it is known today, presents itself as a quiet New England village with large handsome eighteenth and nineteenth century homes, ringing a double common.
Bliss Tavern door surround

Former Courthouse, now active Cultural Center





The Oliverian Brook, at the foot of today’s Route 10, was a hub of industrial activities: there were numerous factories including those for constructing carriages, a saw and gristmill, carding, and so on. Noise and smoke rose up from the valley. However, no sign of those former activities survives today with the exception of the Pike Whetstone factory a few miles down the road. Once the railroad went through the neighboring town of Woodsville, Haverhill’s industrial life slowed and ultimately concluded, leaving the town much as you see it today.
Recent research by the author has linked specific late18th-early19th century residents of Haverhill to trade and mercantile interests in Boston, particularly at Long Wharf. Surviving letters and account books from the Montgomery family (see earlier post on Myra Montgomery) indicate that foreign goods such as oranges, Madeira wine, Chinese silks and crepes, and accessories such as feathers, as well the latest domestic fashions from Boston and New York were available in Haverhill within a week to ten days after arrival at Port.  














Saturday, October 8, 2011

Community Note: Applaud 4H Week!

A Personal Reflection on 4H

The 4-H Pledge

I pledge:
My head to clearer thinking
My heart to greater loyalty
My hands to larger service
My health to better living for my club, my community, my country, and my world.

In early August, I found myself sitting in the Stoddard Building on the North Haverhill Fairgrounds, overlooking the Connecticut River in Grafton County, New Hampshire, as a judge for the 4-H Style Show. While it seemed to some of my colleagues like an odd choice for the Chief Curator of Strawbery Banke Museum, whose purview traditionally runs to the preservation of historic buildings, seaman’s chests, mirrors, and desks.  But, the atmosphere of talent, creativity, and generosity that these young designers generated was so contagious that I could not resist the invitation to participate in this important “rite of passage” as it were. I would like to offer this short paean to the all those who are involved with 4-H everywhere as 4-H Week 2011 concludes.

I have long been a supporter and fan of 4-H, although, as a 10 year-old living in a small town in western Maryland in the 1970s, I was a sad example of a 4-Her. My family has just moved from a farm a few miles away, but it seemed like a lifetime away, and my sister, Amy, and I wanted to fit into our new community.  We decided to show our beloved (and very, very old) Rhode Island Red hens, Lucy and Gertrude, at the 4-H fair.  Although it turned out that animal husbandry was not our strength—our experiment was a dismal failure—we felt welcomed by our new friends and felt like we belonged here.  Consequently, I always kept an interest in the positive message—learn by doing—a value at the core of 4-H.

Now a resident of Newmarket, New Hampshire and an adjunct member of the History Department faculty at UNH in Durham, I have been honored with the opportunity to again be involved in the program.  In New Hampshire, as in so many states, the 4-H is administered by the university extension program to regional centers throughout the state.  In Grafton County alone, there are some 21 clubs, 15-20 annual programs, over 250 4-H students, 98 trained leaders, and 4 after-school programs.  In a previous project, my dear friend and colleague, Astrida Schaeffer of Schaefferarts had introduced me to Janith Bergeron, co-director of The Sewing Tree (Dover) and the 4-H design revue, and Kathleen Jablonski (UNH Extension, Grafton County). In the process of developing a major costume and textile project for SBM, the idea for collaboration with the 4-H came quickly and easily. SBM Curator Tara Vose, Janith, Astrida, Kathy and Bridget Bleckman of Penumbra Textiles joined in.  Soon, we were working closely with a number of students to develop designs based on the historic garment collection. Sarah, Deanna, Jaden, Liz, Madeline, Kathleen and many others responded to the request for collaboration. It continues to be a fabulous dialogue between kindred spirits.

Although I have moved on from SBM to start my own consulting business, I have been honored to serve as a 4-H design revue judge on several occasions, including state day at UNH in Durham in June and am already looking forward to Grafton County style show judging in April 2012.  Thanks to Kathy, I even had the chance to be a sheep lead line judge at the Haverhill Fair.  This has been a fabulous and rewarding learning opportunity for me, and I value the interactions with 4-H families like the Scrutons and the Koskis. I have been impressed at every turn by the talents and discipline of the 4-Hers. Their skills run the gamut, from creating sketches and patterns, designing garments, selecting fabrics, working on exacting tailoring techniques, to using complex finishes.  The participants are also judged on what would have been known a few decades ago as “comportment”: neatness, composure, and the presentation of their garments.  This meticulous training will stand them in good stead in future interviews and bolster confidence in professional interactions. Of particular note is the fact that 4-Hers are easily adaptable and use their skill sets for multiple projects: it is not uncommon to see ribbon winners in design also placing with quilts, agriculture, horticulture and so on. Transferable skills are a much needed and valued commodity in just about every sector of professional life today.

I have become richer through these interactions and look forward to being involved in whatever small way is possible and useful. Thank you, 4-H, for reminding me of the importance of the 4-H pledge and its applicability to all aspects of our lives no matter what age.

I applaud mentors, instructors, parents and families!  And, especially, I applaud the  youth of 4-H!

Congratulations to a vibrant community!







For further information:
http://extension.unh.edu/4-H/4-H.htm

Photos taken June 2011 and August 2011 - Jaden, Deanna, Sarah + Liz
Photography courtesy of Janith Bergeron, Kathleen Jablonski and Sarah Regan


Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Research Note: Tom Hardiman, Keeper, Portsmouth Athenaeum: The Library of John Fisher

From the Introduction of Money, Revolution & Books, the Athenaeum's Library of John Fisher of London (7-8)

Tom Hardiman, Keeper
Portsmouth Athenaeum, 2011

In 1829, John Fisher of London (1764-1838) donated his substantial library to the Athenaeum. On August 3rd, the Board voted "that the secretary address a letter of thanks to John Fisher of England, Esq. For his late donation of books to this institution." In the published annual report, the directors noted that this was the "most important donation ever made to the library consisting of some two hundred thirty four volumes of very valuable works in various branches of science and general literature..." Nowhere was there any explanation of who John Fisher was or why a London squire would donate books to a library in provincial New Hampshire. 

As time passed, there would have been few Portsmouth residents who would have known that Mr. Fisher was a native of Portsmouth and his valuable library was a material testament to his family's amazing tale of intercontinental avarice, political subterfuge, harrowing delivery from imminent danger, and their remarkable series of legal triumphs which made them arguable the only victors of both sides of the American Revolution. For all its amazing historic associations, the Fisher library was every bit as fitting for the Athenaeum's Cabinet of Curiosities as for its library shelves, but for 180 years the books were distributed into the general catalog, each banished to its subject. What remains of the Fisher library was reunited and re-cataloged as a discrete collection in December of 2010, and the true significance of the gift can be appreciated for the first time since the gift increased the Athenaeum's holdings by ten percent in 1829.

For exhibition hours and related programs, see http://www.portsmouthathenaeum.org/

Editorial note: Having read Mr. Hardiman's manuscript, it is clear that this publication represents an astonishingly rich trove of new and previously uncovered research. It will prove invaluable to scholars and students of the American Revolution in general and northern New England's role in particular.  For the general reader, the tale of the Fisher family of Portsmouth (NH), Salem (MA), London and various English counties, reads like an intercontinental novel of shifting allegiances, political and courtroom dramas played out amongst royalty and courtiers, with the large northern land grants being traded like chess pieces among family, friends and those connected through various alliances. For local and regional historians and genealogists, the names of the Wentworths, Atkinsons and many others, take on larger personas.  Mr. Hardiman's grasp of his material is exceptional and his ability to make it accessible is indeed worthy of note.


John Fisher, Sr. courtesy of NH Historical Society

Reading Room, Old Library

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Research Note: Rebecca Kinsman in China, 1843-1847

“Demure Quakeress”: Rebecca Kinsman in China, 1843–1847
Kimberly Sayre Alexander, Ph.D.

Excerpt: In Our Own Words: New England Diaries,1600 to the Present, Vol. 2, Neighborhoods, War, Travel, and History, Dublin Seminar for New England Folklife Annual Proceedings, 2006/2007
(Boston: Boston University, 2009): 102-113        
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           
How plainly I can see those dear County Street parlors as thee describes them, and oh!  How inexpressible are my longings to look in upon them and their dear inmates . . . the ties that bind us to home, are very strong and not easily severed.

— Rebecca to “My best beloved Friend,” Macao, Thursday, 7 March 1844 


In July1843, Rebecca Chase Kinsman (1810–1882) departed her home port of Salem, Massachusetts for Macao and Canton, China, with her husband, Nathaniel Kinsman (1798–1847), and two of their three children, Nattie and Ecca.  Nathaniel was taking up a position in Canton with the trading house of Wetmore and Company, and the couple had made the decision—unusual in antebellum America—to travel together to what was then an exotic and strange world.  Indeed, the diaries and letters shared between the couple offer a rare glimpse into an early American household that challenges conventional interpretations.

The written record for the Kinsman family is particularly strong.  Not only have a decade of letters between husband and wife and their respective families survived, but also household receipts, diaries, and Nathaniel’s ship logs are among the rich collection housed at the Phillips Library at the Peabody Essex Museum, the Schlesinger Library, the Smith College Library and in private hands. 1 However, in order to place the family’s personal and professional lives in a larger antebellum New England context, this paper will focus on Rebecca’s diary entries, in contrast to her letters, providing a special opportunity to investigate the issue of the domestic lives of early American women travelers and expatriates.

Rebecca used her diary in a number of ways and was clearly cognizant that her travel to China marked an important episode in her life: indeed, after her return to the United States, it is exceedingly difficult to unearth any subsequent information about her.  She used her diary to record her experiences in Macao, Canton and Manila, and on her voyages to and from China; as a day book tracking household expenses; as a place to record her detailed observations and her daily frustrations with not only the management of a household staff whose language she did not understand, but also a medium to vent the longing for her “dear absent hubby;” a place where she recorded what she was currently reading, what letters and packages have been received (or not) from home and her thoughts on the local denizens: dress, habits and so on, as well as her reactions to sermons and visits, social events, and walks.  When compared to her letters home (detailed and chatty, but also reflecting homesickness and concern over the current divisive nature of Quaker meeting, local politics, and health of absent friends) or her letters to Nathaniel (she was more open in these regarding daily struggles and concerns for his health and well-being of their children), her diary operates in a middle arena.  It is sporadic commentary which “spikes” for important events and trails off when life is “routine” in Macao or Canton.

These letters and diaries shared between Rebecca and Nathaniel offer a rare glimpse into an early American household that challenges conventional interpretations.  They reveal Nathaniel as a sensitive, romantic figure, who was ill at ease in the public sphere of business and who sought solace in the private sphere of family, while Rebecca, on the other hand, was the stronger partner, supervising a household of Chinese servants, arranging travel, and even organizing a reception for visiting Plenipotentiary Caleb Cushing in 1844 for the signing of the first trade treaty between China and America.

This article is part of a larger study of the Kinsman family in China (manuscript in preparation with Prof. Dane Morrison, Salem State University) is situated within two strains of recent historiography—family history and travel narratives.  A number of studies have examined marriage in the new nation, most recently Anya Jabour’s Marriage in the Early Republic: Elizabeth and William Wirt and the Companionate Ideal (1998) and Timothy Kenslea’s The Sedgwicks in Love: Courtship, Engagement, and Marriage in the Early Republic (2005).  Over the last decade historians have focused on travel narratives of both men and women. 2  However, this exploration into the lives of the Kinsmans provides an unparalleled opportunity to marry both themes—investigating travel narratives and domestic life simultaneously and placing them within the context of an antebellum New England family and their experiences abroad.