Spring 2014 - Cheshire Historical Society
Transcription
Spring 2014 - Cheshire Historical Society
CHESHIRE HISTORICAL SOCIETY NEWS Volume 37, No. 1 PROGRAM Monday, March 24, 7:30 p.m. “America's Moveable Feasts: The Heart and Soul of Our National Holidays” Barney Kathan Book in the Works, "America's Moveable Feasts: The Heart and Soul of Our National Holidays," by the Rev. Boardman "Barney" Kathan. A retired minister, he has served churches in Connecticut (including Cheshire), Illinois and Minnesota, worked on a national board in New York City and a state conference in Boston, and for many years was the executive of an inter-faith, international organization. Special attention will be given to Gov. Samuel Foot's 1834 Thanksgiving Proclamation, which is on display in the Meeting Room and provided the title for one chapter, "Thanksgiving, Prayer and Praise." Monday, April 28, 7:30 p.m. “Copper and Baryite Mining in Cheshire” Charles W. Dimmick Charles Wm. Dimmick is a Professor of Geology Emeritus, having retired from Central Connecticut State University (CCSU) in 2005 after 40 years of teaching. He is a Certified Professional Geologist, and served for three years as national editor for the American Institute of Professional Geologists (AIPG) and three years as President of the Northeast Section of AIP. He has been a member of the Cheshire Wetlands Commission since 1974, and is currently Treasurer of the Connecticut Association of Conservation and Inland Wetlands Commissions. He received degrees from Colorado School of Mines, University of Florida, and Tulane University. (Dr. Dimmick is also an active parishioner of St. Peter’s Episcopal Church, an officer of Cheshire Grange (Patrons of Husbandry) and active in committees of the Connecticut State Grange and of the Association of Connecticut Fairs. ) Dr. Dimmick will discuss mining operations in Cheshire, beginning with the discovery of copper near the Parker farm in 1711. The Cheshire Historical Society welcomes new members! Please tell a friend to join! IN THIS ISSUE: • • • • Researching the Pewter at the HPH A Shooting in Dallas: Member Shares Photos 1972 DIY: Converting Dormitory to Museum “Spirits Come Alive” at Hillside Cemetery Spring/Summer 2014 SPRING CALENDAR Except for holiday weekends, the Hitchcock-Phillips House (HPH) will be open to the public every Sunday, 2-4 p.m. from April through the end of the year. It is also open by appointment on other days. Call 203-272-8771 to schedule a visit. March 24 Monday 7:30 p.m. Membership Meeting SPEAKER April 6 Sunday 2-4 p.m. House reopens for Sunday visiting hours April 21 Monday 7:30 p.m. Board of Directors Meeting April 28 Monday 7:30 p.m. Annual Meeting SPEAKER May 19 Monday 7:30 p.m. Board of Directors Meeting May 25 Sunday House closed for Memorial Day Weekend See us in the parade! June 14 Saturday Strawberry Festival Antiques & Collectible Sale; Boutique-in-the-Shed Grand Opening July 6 Sunday House is closed for July Fourth Weekend August 31 Sunday House is closed for Labor Day Weekend Sept. 28 Sunday Second Annual Cheshire History Trolley Tour! Starting June 14 through October, the Boutique-in-the-Shed will be open during Sunday visiting hours, 2-4 p.m. BOUTIQUE TO OPEN JUNE 14 The Boutique-in-the-Shed is getting ready for its Spring opening on Saturday, June 14, along with our annual Antiques & Collectibles Sale and the Strawberry Festival. All of the proceeds go back into programs and upkeep of the Society. Come on in and poke around! The prices are right, and you never know what you might find. We have been collecting treasures all season and have brought in many unusual and interesting items. After June 14, the Boutique will be open summer Sundays through October. Don’t forget we are always looking for items, too. If you have collectible items that you wish to donate, call Assistant Curator Kathleen Connolly, 860-518-6156. 2 Cheshire Historical Society News—Spring/Summer 2014 FROM THE PRESIDENT ... SHOWERED IN KINDNESS Ann Doolittle Eastwood of Venice, Florida created a handmade hooked rug for the Society (detail in photo below): an exquisite piece that we will treasure. I realized we have much to treasure. So many people who have showered the Society with kindness and dedication. We are a body of people devoted to preservation and education. Meetings are held. Events are organized. Tours are provided. Thousands of items, large and small, are cataloged and cared for. In any given “slow” week, at least half dozen volunteers will provide a minimum of forty hours of time. Our tireless curators headed by our most capable Mary Ellen Kania continue to research and catalog our collections. Much time and thought is given to the exhibits you’ll see in the glass cases at the Society. Volunteers of all ages come forth: young Jack LaMadeleine who diligently cleaned out the spiders and webs in the basement; Alice Santello who is an administrative gift every Tuesday; Colleen Fitzgerald with her brilliant smile as she guides people during our Sunday hours or assists with the Boutique; Inge Venus who is either snapping wonderful photos or creating wonderful gardenscapes; Warren and Lois Van Almkerk who know the HPH probably better than their own home and give insightful advice and support. This names just a few! People, so many people, who volunteer, are part of our Board, who help in so many ways: like the braids in Ann’s beautiful rug, all plaited together in a common goal of service to preservation, to the Cheshire Historical Society. I can only be grateful to be part of such a community.—Diane MEMBERS SHARE / UPCOMING EVENTS Do you have an event that you would like to have listed in our newsletter? Contact Diane Calabro at dacalabro@cox.net for consideration. February 14-March 12th - New project, Cheshirepedia, an on -line “resource for all things Cheshire,” is actively seeking start-up donations at www.kickstarter.com Please go to this website to make a donation to this worthwhile cause. Saturday April 12th Inge Venus reports that the Cheshire Garden Club is actively involved in a membership drive this year and hopes to attract some new members with an exhibit at the upcoming Home and Garden Expo on April 12th at the Cheshire High School. For further info, contact 203-631-9340 Sunday May 25th - Memorial Day Parade. The Cheshire Historical Society will be in the parade! Join us! Mid-October 2014 - “Spirits Alive” Cemetery Lantern Tour. Stephen and Thomas Mulholland are chairing this walking tour of one of our local cemeteries. Contact Diane Calabro for tour and/or ticket information. In Process - Rails Through Cheshire: A Train and Trolley Tour. Bob Belletzkie is working on a fascinating look at where the trains and trolleys used to run in Cheshire. Volunteers are needed! Contact Diane Calabro. Look! RICE REUNION BOOK - Request from Margaret (Meg) Sondey, Life Member - “When I was in Connecticut this past summer, I was able to look at the Rice Reunion book in possession of the Cheshire Connecticut Historical Society. At that time, we were unable to learn anything about when the book was donated, or by whom. [Does] anyone know how the Historical Society came to be in possession of that book? I am hoping that I might solve some of the mysteries of that branch of the Royce/Rice family for an article in the Royce Family Association of which I am a member. Thank you so much!” If you have information, please contact Mary Ellen Kania. Town Center App Taking Shape NEW MEMBERS Welcome to the following new members who have joined since the last newsletter: Juline Beier (Life), Sausalito, CA Sheree Brown, Hamden, CT Marvin Carley, (Hon. Life), East Haven, CT Lisa Drazen & Kevin Meehan, Wallingford Rd., Cheshire June & Van Hale, Quarry Village Rd., Cheshire Jill Rochford, W. Main St., Cheshire Joseph & Nina Vianese, Mountain Crest Dr., Cheshire Tim White & Carrie Collins, Orchard Hill Rd., Cheshire Deborah Wylie, Dundee Dr., Cheshire Town Historian, Jeanné Chesanow, has been working on a virtual tour of Cheshire’s Town Center that can be accessed by mobile devices to provide - anywhere, anytime - the beauty and history of the Town Center. Along with Society Curator, Mary Ellen Kania, photos have been selected for the project and the script is being finalized. The project promises to bring the past to life, along with descriptions of architectural details still in place. The new app will be a lively experience, one we hope will enhance interest in town history and the Society’s work. Spoiler Alert! A hot air balloon may be an integral part of the new app! Cheshire Historical Society News—Spring/Summer 2014 3 EIGHTEENTH CENTURY PEWTER AT THE CHESHIRE HISTORICAL SOCIETY By Dotty Drufva A year or two ago I became interested in antique pewter collecting. As a long-time member of the historical society, I was surprised when I realized that I had not noticed the small, but very interesting pewter collection that is on display at the Hitchcock-Phillips House. There are four marked pewter plates dating from the last half of the 18th century to the first quarter of the 19th century as well as a mid 19th century pewter teapot. Pewter was in common use in America across all classes from the colonial era up until the 1840s or 50s. Pewter that is stamped with a maker’s mark is the most sought after by collectors, although approximately half of the thousands of pewter items produced did not have any marks at all. These unmarked items often can be attributed to a particular maker or a geographical region, nonetheless. I asked Wayne Hilt, a well-known pewter expert who lives in Connecticut, for his opinion on two of the plates that bear clearly legible marks. I could roughly make out the name King, on the back of a large charger. Wayne confirmed that the charger was made by Richard King Jr., a pewterer working in London, England who died in 1792. This large charger shows the considerable wear that is often seen on an object that is at least 220 years old. However, in its usual place on the mantel in the keeping room, the charger has rustic charm and retains a majestic quality. Wayne agreed with me that another smaller dinner plate was made by Thomas Danforth II, who died in 1782 and who did most of his work in Middletown, Connecticut. Pewter plates are not as rare as many other forms of pewter, such as chalices or flagons which were used in church services. However, this particular plate is special because it can be dated to the early career of one of the pioneers of the trade in Connecticut. It is in unusually good condition considering that it is at least 235 years old or older. Early plates such as this often display a different level of craftsmanship than those that were produced in larger quantities later on. On this Danforth plate, the booge or curved portion of the plate is hammered in even rows. This practice had a strengthening effect on the metal. This type of hammering is often seen on English plates of the same period. The Richard King Jr. charger has a hammered booge as well. However the edges are worn away and one has to look closely to see this detail. The hammering on the Danforth plate is strong and well defined. Thomas Danforth II is thought to have trained more apprentices than any other pewterer in America according to John Carl Thomas who authored a classic book on the subject (reference below). Among Danforth’s apprentices was the eldest of his six sons, Thomas Danforth III. It is thought that Thomas III inherited the marking dies from his father and used them extensively within the prodigious output of his own career. Because of this and for other reasons collectors have studied damage that has shown up on the marks quite closely. The Historical Society’s plate has sharp, clear, undamaged marks. These details provide further indication or proof that Thomas Danforth II made the plate most likely sometime between 1760 and 1775 before his death in 1782. The early Danforth marks mimic the styles used by English craftsmen. After the American Revolution, Thomas Danforth III and most of his contemporaries changed much of their marking to include eagles or other imagery seen as symbolic of the new republic. I should also mention that in addition to his six sons, Thomas II had one daughter, Sarah, who married Oliver Boardman. The resulting Boardman family created a pewter-making dynasty, selling wares along the entire east coast of the U.S. In his wonderful book, John Carl Thomas ends his section on Thomas Danforth II with this heartfelt obituary from the Connecticut Courant, Tuesday August 20, 1782: Middletown, August 10, 1782 – “Last Thursday died here after a few days illness, of a bilious disorder, Mr. THOMAS DANFORTH, Brazier, and pewterer, of this town, in the 52d year of his age – A tender and affectionate Husband and Father, an excellent neighbour, and a just, upright, honest man; in him not only the Family and Neighbourhood, but the Poor sustain a heavy loss; this tribute of gratitude, his friends and neighbours think but just to pay to his memory; yet while they mourn the loss of so good a man, they rejoice in the great prospect of his ever lasting felicity.” (Thomas, p. 75) For those who are interested in learning more about pewter, The Pewter Collectors’ Club of America (PCCA) has an excellent website. The club plans national meetings on two weekends per year in the spring and in the fall. There is also a Northeast chapter that holds a luncheon meeting two times per year. I have attended these in Sturbridge, MA and I have been told that there is a tentative plan for an upcoming meeting to be held somewhere along the Connecticut coast. If you would like to know more about purchasing pewter, the PCCA website has a contact list for its member dealers. Wayne Hilt, who contributed information for this article, is on that list, or you can Google Wayne Hilt Pewter to see his excellent offerings. One can also always find antique pewter on eBay. As many of you probably already know - eBay is great; but using it can sometimes end up as a ‘learning experience’; and all of that is beyond the scope of this article. Reference: Thomas, John Carl. Connecticut Pewter and Pewterers. The Connecticut Historical Society. 1976, pp. 62-75. Above left: Photo detail of the stamped maker’s mark on a pewter plate owned by the Cheshire Historical Society 4 Cheshire Historical Society News—Spring/Summer 2014 These photos were taken by Society Director Robert Larkin in 1963. See story on Page 5 d Cheshire Historical Society News—Spring/Summer 2014 A SHOOTING IN DALLAS By Robert Larkin November 2013 - During the past few weeks there have been a number of documentary specials on TV remembering the assassination of President John Kennedy. They brought to mind a number of photos I resurrected from my cellar that I had taken on a trip to Dallas the week after JFK was killed. The photos were actually slides taken with my split frame camera in 1963 and converted last year to jpeg. While the quality isn’t that good, they captured the reenactment of the shooting with a convertible and standins for the President and his wife, surveyors still at the site checking the marked locations in the road, flowers being brought to the Dealey Plaza area and of course the Texas Book Depository. Many TV broadcasts and newspaper articles discussed the history and asked where people were when they heard the news. For me, it was an easy answer but the trip to Texas is by far and away the one I’ll never forget. Rediscovering the slides in my basement here in Cheshire brought back many memories from fifty years ago. On Page 4: Slides photographed by Robert Larkin in 1963 IN 1963—There were no actual camera shops in Cheshire. If you wished to purchase a camera you could do so in Waterbury: Caesar’s Camera Shop on Bank Street (“Your Authorized Kodak Dealer - all types & makes of camera equipment”), Curtis Art Co. on West Main Street, Goldie’s Camera Shop or Speed’s Camera Co., Inc. on Grand Street. Also in New Haven: Fair Haven Camera Shop on Grand Avenue, Karber Photo Shop & Lab (selling ANSCO, Kodak, Argus, Graflex, Revere, Keystone, Bell & Howell, T.D.C., and Polaroid Land Cameras) on Dixwell Avenue with ample parking, or Temple Camera Shop on College. Source: 1963 telephone directory on file at Cheshire Historical Society. Note that the Polaroid Land Camera would set you back $279 — an expensive purchase considering the average monthly salary was about $430. E-MAILS FOR HISTORY QUESTIONS Town Historian: cheshirehistorian@cox.net Our CHS Curator: maryellenkania@cox.net CHS President: dacalabro@cox.net Cheshirepedia: cheshirepedia@cox.net 5 MARSHALL ROBINSON SPINS A YARN IN DERBY Paula Norton, Deputy Director of the Derby Historical Society (above, left), met with CHS Director Marshall Robinson (above, right) who made a special delivery to Derby. We had an unassembled spinning wheel in our collection. Marshall shared that the Derby Historical Society conducts classes in spinning and other fabric arts and they could rebuild our spinning wheel and use this in their program. The CHS Board voted unanimously to donate the “as is” spinning wheel and Marshall very kindly delivered this, saying, “We at the Cheshire Historical Society hope that the spinning wheel works out for you. I think it's nice when two groups such as ours can work together.” We hope to include an update on this project and more information about the Derby Historical Society classes. This garden area along the north side of the HPH is maintained by the Suburban Garden Club and is in full bloom during the Strawberry Festival. Photo by Susan Dillman In Memoriam Kristen (Manke) Slocum, wife of Tim Slocum Feb. 10, 2014 Alfred Stapkowski, father of Diane Calabro Sep. 25, 2013 We were deeply saddened by the deaths of these members and extend our sincere sympathy to their families 6 Cheshire Historical Society News—Spring/Summer 2014 FORTY YEARS AT 43 CHURCH DRIVE: Establishing the HitchcockPhillips House as the home of the Cheshire Historical Society in 1972 Articles describe bake sales, an auction that raised over $7,000, a folk art display that drew a crowd of over 300 people and more. Photographs display a younger Ed Kania, then on the Cheshire Board of Finance, and another with the author herself dressed in period costume. Warren Van Almkerk’s name appears repeatedly in By Lois Van Almkerk In the summer of 1972, you might have put an eight cent stamp on the letter you were sending to President Richard M. Nixon to express your disapproval about the Watergate scandal. You might have opened the door of your new Ford Pinto (cost: $2,078) to do a little shopping: a pound of ground beef was 98 cents, a pound of strawberries was 31 cents. You’d listen to 13-year old Michael Jackson sing his first solo hit on your car radio and put gas in your car for 55 cents a gallon. You might even have noticed all the activity on the Church Green as the Cheshire Historical Society “enjoyed a dream come true,” according to the August 18, 1972 edition of The Newtown Bee, as the Town of Cheshire had purchased the house that Col. Rufus Hitchcock built in 1785 and the Cheshire Town Council released the use of the house to the Society. Then Co-Curator, Warren Van Almkerk, had discovered that the original chamfered paneling was actually intact under the commercial pine paneling installed by the previous owners, the Cheshire Academy. This is some of the first information to be found in a scrapbook assembled by Evelyn Brodeur, the wife of Armand A. Brodeur, Society President from 1972 to 1974, and 1985-1986. Mrs. Brodeur’s daughter, Evelyn Michaud, presented this scrapbook of newspaper clippings, event invitations and Society correspondence to Warren Van Almkerk. The scrapbook begins in the summer of 1972 with the announcement that the Society was to use the townpurchased “A.W. Phillips House,” as it was known in the early Seventies, and continues with the purchase process, the restoration and related funding projects, and ends with a special American Folk Art exhibit that showcased the grand opening of the House in the late fall of that same year. Current President Diane Calabro has electronically scanned the contents of this scrapbook and has put these on the Society website. These were the heydays of the Society when the Renovation Drive encompassed not just Society members but involved door-to-door canvassing that appealed to all “Cheshirites” to help contribute $40,000 needed to restore and develop the newly acquired Phillips House. Considering in 1972, the average annual income was $11,000 and that houses were being sold for about $20,000 and you understand the magnitude of this funding project. President Brodeur envisioned this as the “Community Historical Center” with the goal of making this the “focal point in rekindling interest, knowledge, and instruction in the many arts and crafts utilized by our forefathers.” these articles. The “tedious” restoration work referred to by President Brodeur was graciously taken on by Warren who restored and redecorated the former school dormitory and classrooms into the Hitchcock-Phillips House museum we treasure today. Above: Four decade old photo from The Newtown Bee (August 18, 1972): “Warren Van Almkerk, curator of the Cheshire Historical Society, discovering old panelling under the commercial panelling installed by the Academy when it was a dormitory.” IN 1972, the Cheshire Football Rams would summarily trounce Westport’s Staples High School. Current House Chairman, David Calabro, Cheshire ‘74 (photo left) in uniform. Our Society President Diane Stapkowski Calabro, Staples ’74, would occasionally see her future husband on the field of play. Neither HS Junior had any idea they’d be wed. Again proves that football is a most interesting sport. Go Rams! Cheshire Historical Society News—Spring/Summer 2014 CURATOR NOTES CEMETERY TOUR (Continued from Back Cover) By Mary Ellen Kania, Curator EXHIBIT CASES: New exhibits will be in the two Meeting Room display cases when the house re-opens for Sunday visiting hours in April. “Spirits Alive” 2014 Hillside Cemetery Lantern Tour: Hillside Cemetery invites you to participate On the north wall, the case will feature the certificate signed by the US Postmaster appointing Edward Andrews as Postmaster in Cheshire in 1875. It was a gift from member Ralph Edson and the Society had it “conserved” at the Northeast Document Conservation Center, Andover, MA in the fall. The certificate will highlight a display of Cheshire postal memorabilia from our Postal Collection. On the south wall, the case will display items from the Durand Family collection. These include many “fun” artifacts such as the puppets Howard “Pop” Durand used in the family vaudeville act, 1905-1916. Contributions in Addition to 2014 Dues Warm thanks to the following members who made special contributions in addition to their 2014 dues payments. Major Mary B. Hobler Hyson Mr. & Mrs. John Knott Elizabeth Lewis Panke Joseph & Suzanne Robinson David & Sally Schrumm Supporting Members Mike & Gail Collins Marty Connolly Jay & Carole Cunningham Addie Marx Other Contributors Peg Boutwell David & Diane Calabro Robert & Noreen Cawood Gary & Denise Charette Gerald & Adoria Corcoran Helen Lee Richard Miller Louis & Mary Ann Ricciuti Ralph & Bernice Rowland Marie Stapkowski William F. Suter Ingeborg Venus James & Cynthia Vibert, Sr. 7 in a walk among the tombstones presented by the Cheshire Historical Society By Stephen Mulholland & Thomas Mulholland Stephen Mulholland, Student Liaison, is the Event Chairperson and the Co-chairperson of the event is Thomas Mulholland We are organizing an evening walk through Hillside Cemetery located on Wallingford Road scheduled for mid-October, 2014. Every fall, our family enjoys attending cemetery lantern tours across Connecticut and we’re now intending to bring such a tour to Cheshire. We are advertising the event under the tag line “Dead men tell no tales, except when Hillside Cemetery comes alive.”The planning committee has already logged in many hours of research and site visits as we prepare this walking tour. The tours will be led by a guide or "hooded specter" through the historic grounds of Hillside and tour participants will hear tales told firsthand by actors or "Cheshire’s former residents." Thomas has worked to assemble a list of 10 to 12 historic characters including Marietta Moss Peck whose two -year old stepson drowned in the canal, Ebeneezer Johnson the early grave digger, Richard Storrs the World War II soldier memorialized at Hillside but buried in France, Abigail Hitchcock the daughter of Reverend John Foote, Moses Bradley the father of a prankster son and more. The Cemetery Lantern Tour is looking for volunteers to act the parts of the former residents (this can be speaking or non-verbal roles, as desired), as well as tour guides, and help with set up and clean up. Anyone that can share some expertise with costumes would also be very welcome. For more information, contact Stephen Mulholland at e-mail to spiritsalivecemeterytour@cox.net or phone (203) 272-0140. Additional information can be found on the Society web page: www.cheshirehistory.org Photo above: Stephen Mulholland (l.), Thomas Mulholland (r.) Assistant Curator, Warren Van Almkerk, celebrated his 89th birthday in January. At least half of those years have been spent volunteering his time with the Cheshire Historical Society. Thank you, Warren! 8 Cheshire Historical Society News—Spring/Summer 2014 CHESHIRE CLIPPERS We are looking for adult member volunteers to help with a new youth program. Designed for a Sunday afternoon activity, the “Cheshire Clippers” concept is being organized. We envision young people becoming history researchers using Cheshire Herald newspapers from the 1970s to the 1980s. As these are duplicates for us, Board Member Bob Belletzkie suggested the “Clippers.” Children would clip out and date (and read) all the articles that have to do with anything in Cheshire. The subject could be further researched at the Cheshire Library and the child could prepare a brief oral or written report on the topic. Other children could help by filing the gathered information into the permanent Society information files, putting these into the appropriate folders with adult supervision. Certificates will be given in thanks to each Cheshire Clipper. We are excited about this program as the children will learn about Cheshire history and help with our ongoing filing. There are Board Members who will volunteer their time but we also need member volunteers to step forward to assist with this program. If you are interested in volunteering or would like to reserve a space for your child or grandchild, please contact the Society. The Cheshire Clippers would begin as soon as we have the volunteers and interested children Cheshire Historical Society PO Box 281, 43 Church Drive Cheshire, CT 06410 Society Officers President Diane Calabro Vice President Art Sides Secretaries Jaime McCormick Brad Zambruski Joseph Robinson Treasurer Ed Kania Board of Directors Robert Belletzkie Shirley Brady Robert Cawood Robert Larkin Clare Leake Cara Luciani Marshall Robinson Lois Van Almkerk Pat Vita-Garber Student Liaison & Facebook Editor Stephen Mulholland Curators Edgar Johnson, emeritus Mary Ellen Kania Warren Van Almkerk, asst. Kathleen Connolly, asst. Webmaster Diane Calabro Newsletter Editor Diane Calabro CURATOR NOTES By Mary Ellen Kania, Curator CHEERS for member Betsy Fox, who arranged for the Society’s one-of-a-kind Nathan Booth map of Cheshire (1865) to be digitized. Betsy not only obtained funds from the Town Clerk but also scheduled a session with New Haven photographer Bill Sacco, packed the framed map, and drove it round-trip to his studio. The Town Clerk, the Town Historian, and the Society now have JPEG and TIFF images of this important document. NEW ITEMS: Twenty-five individuals donated 49 items to the Society’s collection in 2013. The final item received was a beautiful 2 ft. x 3 ft. braided rug from Ann Doolittle Eastwood of Venice, FL, who visited the Society last summer (see Newsletter, Fall 2013). She made the rug as a Christmas present to the Society. Look for it under the “mammy bench” in the Keeping Room, 1st floor. (Continues on Page 7). SPRING 2014 Use this QR code to quickly visit our CHS website. Our Telephone: 203-272-2574 LIKE us on FACEBOOK! Visit our Website www.cheshirehistory.org *MEMBERSHIP MEETING* - March 24th *ANNUAL MEETING* - April 28th Both Meetings include a Speaker and are Monday Evenings: Start Time: 7:30 p.m. at THE CHESHIRE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
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