Spring 2016 Windham Historical Society Newsletter
Transcription
Spring 2016 Windham Historical Society Newsletter
Windham Historical Society Town Hall 1833 Spring 2016 In this Edition: Article: 3rd Maine Page 1 and History: Page 2 Village Green Project Page 1 And 2 Presidents Letter: Page 3 Manchester: Page 3 Curator’s: Page 3 Windham Then and Now: Page 4 Uncle Tom’s Cabin: Page 4 Around the Society: Page 5 and Page 7 Programs and Calendar: Page 6 Article, It’s Spring: Page 6 Membership News: Page 7 The Underground Railroad: Page 7 Supporters: Page 8 The Windham Historical Society is proud to announce the return of the 3rd Maine Infantry volunteers to our Village Green for the third time in five years. The 3rd Maine will be encamped on the “Green” during the Town’s Summerfest Weekend, June 24-25. This will be a great opportunity for Society members and the public to step back into history and have an emersion experience into the camp life of a Civil War infantryman. Specific scheduling is not yet available, but if this year is anything like previous years, there will be a variety of demonstrations from camp life, sick call, drills, sanitation inspections, and musket fire. Word from Dave Gowen, 3rd Maine coordinator for this event, indicated that the 3rd Maine muster this year will be a simulation of the 1861 muster of new recruits. The public will be invited to join the ranks on Sunday afternoon for drill practice. Page 2 is a brief history of the 3rd Maine through to the infamous battle at Gettysburg. (Windham Historical Society File Photo) Dave Tanguay Dave Tanguay Village Green to Move Buildings: This year, the Society is slated to move two buildings onto foundations on the Village Green. Dave Douglas is currently designing the addition and engineered foundation to the yellow South Windham Library. Once moved, the Library building will reflect its South Windham Village past with artifacts from the “Village Library,” the Old Railroad Station, and artifacts from the hose house and other items from the South Windham Fire Department. The second foundation to be placed will be for the Old Hawks’ Grocery. It is anticipated that the building will be moved in late summer, funding permitting. Society members Dave Tanguay and Jim Hansom had a meeting with Architect, Dave Douglas; Town Code Enforcement Officer, Heather McNally; Fire Chief Libby and Assistant Fire Chief Wescott to discuss the Village Green Plans. (Cont. Page 2) Spring 2016 Editor: Haley Pal, haleypal@aol.com Assistant Editor/Layout/Writer: Dave Tanguay, dtanguay46@aol.com Writer: Kay Soldier, kso48@aol.com Advertising/Writer: Sue Simonson, ssimons1@maine.rr.com Page 2 3rd Maine: (cont.) “A Brief History of the 3rd Maine: On June 4, 1861, the Bath City Grays, one of the more active Maine militia units, was mustered into federal service as part of the 3rd Maine Infantry Regiment. They formed all of Company A and most of Company D. The majority of the men were tradesmen, shipwrights, shopkeepers, and artisans, while the rest of the unit came from towns up and down the Kennebec River--Gardiner, Hallowell, Augusta, Winthrop, Waterville, Winslow, and Skowhegan. The unit encamped on the grounds of Capitol Park, directly in front of the Maine State House and overlooking the Kennebec River. The Regiment was commanded by Colonel Oliver O. Howard from Leeds, Maine, who went on to serve as a general during the war. Howard was the head of the Freedmen's Bureau after the war. (Howard University is named after him.) The 3rd Maine first "saw the elephant" (a Civil War term meaning one's first time in battle) at the first battle of Bull Run on July 21, 1861, and during the next three years was engaged in 25 major battles, including the Peninsular Campaign, Second Bull Run, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, the Wilderness, and Spotsylvania. There were many smaller skirmishes as well, and by June of 1864, the greatly reduced 3rd Maine found most of its men had served their three years. Sixty-four of the original men re-enlisted and they, along with the replacement recruits, were transferred to the 17th Maine at Cold Harbor just before the awful slaughter there. When the 17th Maine Infantry mustered out of service on June 10, 1865, several veterans of the original 3rd Maine had served four years and one week The 3rd Maine experienced what was probably its most difficult day on the morning of July 2, 1863. One hundred ninety-six enlisted men and 14 officers reported for duty with the Regiment, which was positioned near the left of the Union line running south of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. (About 1.000 men had left Maine with the Regiment in the summer of 1861.) Ordered to reconnoiter the Confederate positions in front of the Third Corps, the 3rd Maine, along with about 100 Berdan Sharpshooters, encountered and skirmished with Confederates in Pitzer's Woods during the morning. Several 3rd Maine men were killed or wounded. Later that day, after Third Corps commander General Daniel Sickles ordered the entire corps to move forward and take an unsupported position well in front of the main Union line, the 3rd Maine found itself, along with three other regiments from different brigades, in an exposed line of battle near the Peach Orchard. In the fight with attacking Confederates of General James Longstreet's corps which soon followed, the men of the 3rd Maine fought desperately and were nearly surrounded before they were forced to give ground. The entire color guard company, Company K, many of whom came from Leeds, was killed or captured. The 3rd Maine, along with the other regiments in the vicinity of the Peach Orchard and Wheat Field, helped to delay the Confederate advance and buy time for the Union Army to reinforce its left flank and defeat the attack. That evening 97 3rd Maine men were present to answer the roll call.” http://thirdmaine.org/ If you missed them during earlier visits, make a point of seeing them this June while we still have room on the Green for their encampment Village Green: (cont. from page 1) The significant result of this meeting was the agreement on the security and safety needs for each of the proposed buildings to be placed on the Green. This agreement allows the Society to move forward with the next four buildings knowing that by meeting specific fire code and adaptability codes the buildings can be moved and placed. Each building with have: security lighting, fire exit signs, fire extinguishers, and be adapted for handicapped accessibility with ramps, etc. With the opening of the One-Room Schoolhouse, and placement of the South Windham Library (museum), the “Old Hawk’s Grocery” (museum), and the Windham Center Library, the “Village Green” will take on the characteristics of a Village and brings the Society closer to being a destination. Dave Tanguay Spring 2016 Dear Friends and Members, Let’s make 2016 a year to remember! We have gotten through an “easy” winter and are now ready to tackle the challenge of creating the Village Green! There’s much to be done in the upcoming months and we’ll look to our members for support as things begin moving forward. We are full of ideas, but need money and manpower (or women power) to carry them out. All of the programs provided by the Windham Historical Society are interesting, but our March program, When Maine Burned, about the 1947 fire and presented by storyteller Jo Radner, was particularly well attended. We filled the parking lot and Windham Library meeting room with enthusiastic individuals interested in hearing about this historic event that took place right in our backyard. Barry Atwood of North Gorham brought in Portland Press Herald newspapers with front page stories about the fire that devastated Maine. Member Dave Tobin wrote of his memories of getting released from Windham High School to fight the fires in neighboring towns. If you have stories about the fire that you can share with the Society, please let us know. Dave Tanguay is putting the finishing touches on the Village Green One-Room Schoolhouse and getting it ready for its inaugural class and grand opening in May. Sabrina Nickerson’s students from Manchester School will be the first to have a lesson taught to them in the new building. We would like to extend our thanks to the third graders at Windham Primary School for raising $700 that will go towards McGuffey readers for future lessons. The fifth grade students at Manchester are presently raising funds to donate to the school as well. We’re glad to know that young people in our community are so interested in history. I myself attended a one-room schoolhouse on Mighty Street in Gorham back in 1953. There were four grades and we brought our lunches each day. In winter, we heated tomato soup and baked potatoes on the large pot belly wood stove in the middle of the room. Water was brought in from a well, but we each had our own drinking cup. There were his and her outhouses in the back of the class and three of us, who were second graders, spent many hours sitting on the floor in the outhouse cutting out pictures of birds, trees, and flowers from a large pile of magazines to make booklets about each state in the US and the countries in Europe. I remember that it was fun to get our work done quickly so we could listen to what was being taught to older classes! Did you attend a one-room schoolhouse? If so, please write down your memories, or we can come and do an interview with you to hear your recollections. Our craft ladies (Norma Rogers, Izzy Gilman, Sue Simonson, and Carolyn and Linda Tetrault) have retired from creating the hugely successful Old-Fashioned Christmas Craft Fair and they all deserve a big THANK YOU from all our members!! The fair was our most successful fundraiser each year, adding over $5,000 annually to our goals. Thank you, ladies, for all the beautiful one-of-a-kind gifts you have created over the years! Page 3 Elaine and Don Dickenson of Windham have donated a beautiful Victorian bedroom set and Flora Woodside gave us a lovely painted bedroom set last fall that the family of Persis Harding (my third grade teacher in Gorham) who lived on Hall Road in Windham, had used and given to Flora’s mother years ago. Thank you for the generous donations. Linda Griffin, President Manchester School Class Raises Funds in Support of Society’s One-Room Schoolhouse. Back in the days when paper was expensive or scarce, scholars used slates to answer questions or solve arithmetic problems. Chalk or wax pencils were the pencils of the day. These are just a few of the items needed to operate the Windham Historical Society’s One-Room Schoolhouse on the Village Green, “slated” to open in May. Schoolhouse organizers were approached by Sabrina Nickerson’s fifth grade class at Manchester School last fall with an offer to raise funds for the project. School liaison volunteers Walter Lunt and Carol Manchester visited the class in January to share pictures and stories of 19th century schools in Windham. As part of Manchester School’s annual community fundraising activity known as Community Day, Nickerson’s class expressed an interest in contributing money for slates to be used by visiting students learning about one-room schoolhouses. Pennies are now being collected in an effort known as “cents-for-slates.” The school has invited members of the Society’s Board of Directors to participate in Community Day in April where they will accept a check from Nickerson’s class .In late May, the fifth graders have been invited to be the inaugural elementary class to participate in a 19th century school experience at the Society’s OneRoom Schoolhouse near the Town House Museum on Windham Center Road. Curators Corner: Penny Laura Accessions have been arriving at a steady pace. We have been given a CD with photos of the demolition of the Week’s house by Michelle Libby, editor of the Windham Eagle; Windham School ephemera from Eileen WestonCyr Cyr from fromHermon, Hermon,Maine; Maine; furniture, furniture, including a four-drawer Weston including a four-drawer pine dresser; aaccent uniquetable; a green desk, pine dresser; a unique pine rectangular pine rectangular accent table; a green desk, probably for a child; a pine drop leaf table; a plank bottom chair; two probably for akegs; child;a amilk pinecan drop leafOakhurst table; a Dairy, all donated by small wooden from plank bottom chair; two small wooden kegs; a Donna Beth Rudolph. milk can from Oakhurst Dairy, all donated by Donna Beth Rudolph. Sue Pascarella, a local Windham resident, donated a carriage lantern, numerous porcelain tea pots, sugar bowls, cups, and saucers, and also a Sue Pascarella, local Windham resident,cup, and a tin camp stove. hurricane lamp, aa large copper measuring donatedBaiar a carriage lantern, numerous porcelain Ursula brought in a ladder-back chair. tea pots, sugar bowls, cups, and saucers and also aManchester hurricane lamp, largebeen copper Carol and Iahave sorting through Moses Little Papers. measuring cup, and a tin camp stove.had Ursula During the early 1800s, Moses Little in his possession numerous Baiar brought in a ladder-back chair. legal documents including writs of summons, complaints, and arrest warrants, as well as a few deeds. This requires careful handling, as Carol Manchester I have these fragile documentsand are 200 yearsbeen old! My current project is to sort through index Captain sortingand through MosesAlmon Little Varney’s Papers.Civil War muster records. During the early 1800s, Moses Little Spring 2016 Page 4 Windham Then and Now “The Bean Hole” There’s been a restaurant at this corner of Windham for 90 years. Lowell’s Tea Room, also known as Bean Hole Beans (so called because of the bean hole where beans were baked) operated from 1926 to 1947. It later became Kilgore’s Restaurant. Arthur Kilgore sold the restaurant at the corner of Route 302, right across from the White’s Bridge Road, to “Red” and Sandy Donnelly in 1971. Taking their first names, it became Red Sands Restaurant and was probably the most popular restaurant in Windham for decades. In 1993, their son Bob took over the Red Sands. Most recently, it was Thatcher’s, operated by the late Dave Garry. Today, Franco’s Bistro is located here, providing delicious meals to residents and visitors alike. Uncle Tom’s Cabin: By Kay Soldier When someone is demolishing a house in town, they sometimes call the Windham Historical Society and tell us of something they have found in the walls or attic. Often the “treasure” is saved for the Society, who will do the research and then share the find with the public. In the April 29, 1980 edition of the Courier Free Press (Windham, Maine), an article told of just such a discovery. A local businessman, Fred Haskell, owned a building on Route 302, next to the Dairy Queen site at Boody’s Corner (intersection of Routes 302 & 115). This building, the former post office, was being torn down and a wall full of colorful posters advertising a performance of Uncle Tom’s Cabin was uncovered. Haskell saved these unusual “boards” and donated them to the Historical Society. It was estimated that the posters were put up in either 1884 or 1904. They had been on those walls for nearly 100 years and some of the script was quite faded. The billboards advertised “Witherell and Davies majestic revival of the famous, moral, and picturesque drama of Uncle Tom’s Cabin, “…an unrivalled success,” which was to be performed at a “mammoth pavilion opera house.” Between 1852 and 1900, it’s estimated that a million copies of the book, Uncle Tom’s Cabin, were sold. Next to the Bible, it was the bestselling book following the Civil War. The play, based on the story by Maine author Harriet Beecher Stowe, was performed more often in America than any other production. During the 1880s, there were up to 500 “Tom Shows” on the road across the country. Just where the production advertised in Windham was being performed is not known, however, the fact that it was advertised here shows how popular and well known the show was. Many of these “Tom” shows were minstrel shows. (cont. page 6) Spring d2016 Page 5 Around the Society Got plants? We Can Use Them! Now that spring is really here and the snow is melted, have you discovered your garden is overrun with irises, lilies, chives, mint, or oregano? Do you have plants that need to be divided or that are cluttering up your garden? Don’t throw them away! The Windham Historical Society is holding its Annual Spring Plant and Garden Sale on Saturday, June 4th from 9 am to 2 pm and we are seeking any interesting plantings that you might generously donate to the Society for sale this year. Some perennial favorites that are sure to be on hand include daylilies, hosta, phlox, and culinary herbs. If you have some beautiful favorites of your own that you’d like to share with the Society, please bring them to us to be used as part of our sale. This Annual Plant Sale is a major fundraiser for the Society and your help is much needed and most appreciated. Genealogy Corner Recent inquiries via the website have included the following: If you have extra–plants, like to volunteer at/for the plant call the LIBBY, ISAAC seekingwould information on this early resident, bothsale, “senior” and “junior” who lived in East Windham; Society at 892-1433, email: info@windhamhistorical.org. TRIPP, STEPHEN – and wife Rosa Sawyer. He was a Revolutionary War soldier; MANCHESTER, EVA who was adopted by a family in Canada; HAWKES, MARY ANN, who married a SAWYER, Seeking photo, proof of birth (Ebenezer Hawkes and Dorcas Cobb). If anyone has information on the above, please contact Kay Soldier, kso48@aol.com or info@windhamhistorical.org. Membership News The Society would like to welcome our new members, Lloyd Gilman, Lynne A. Jones, Captain and Mrs. Philip D. Spiller Jr, and Reggie and Tammy Butts. Welcome aboard! Condolences To Nancy Bowden and family on the death of her mother, Ella F. Young, who passed away March 20, 2016. To Walter and Linda Lunt and families on the death of his mother, E, May Lunt, who passed away on February 19, 2016. Help Wanted An outgoing volunteer to be a schoolmaster or schoolmarm to groups of elementary students visiting the soon-to-be One-Room Schoolhouse. Training and support provided. Contact Walter Lunt at 655-3421 or wnlunt@yahoo.com Spring 2016 It’s Spring – A Time of New Beginnings at the Windham Historical Society Winter and its doldrums are past us and now it’s time to look ahead to a new season and new beginnings. Many new things are happening here at the Windham Historical Society: The Society Headquarters building is now heated. Dave’s World in Windham has installed two large heat pumps which will be used to heat the entire first floor of the building in the winter months. This means the Society can expand hours and can be accessible to the public year-round. The Village Green will officially open this spring when the One-Room Schoolhouse opens its doors. Sabrina Nickerson’s class from Manchester School will be the “inaugural” class for the Schoolhouse Open House to be held on Friday, May 20. Students will receive a lesson, eat lunches they bring along, have recess, and then will be taught a second lesson in the afternoon. In addition, the Society has a new membership brochure to send out to prospective members. This fourcolor promotional brochure was designed by Windham resident, Linda Spring Mycock, a professional graphic designer. The Society would like to thank Linda for donating her time and for working with Haley Pal to put this impressive piece together. There are many wonderful activities and events scheduled for the spring season. This newsletter will give you a look at some of them and we hope encourage you to attend and to have fun with history. Right: New Promotional Brochure designed by Linda Spring Mycock Page 6 Society Spring Calendar 2016 Society Building Open for the Season, Tuesday, April 26. Open Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, 10 to Noon or by appointment. Expanded Summer Hours to be determined Call 892-1433. APRIL 4, Monday, Special Board Meeting: WHS Building, 6:30 PM 5, Tuesday: Town Council Workshop Presentation, Village Green, 7:30 PM 18, Monday: Program: Westbrook, Windham, Naples Trolley, Society Building, 7:30 PM (Membership Meeting, 7 PM, before program) 24, Sunday: One-Woman Quilt Show, Friends Meeting Hall, 1 to 5 PM 26, Tuesday: Windham Historical Society Building opens for the season, 10 AM to Noon MAY: 3, Tuesday, Board Meeting: WHS Building, 6:30 PM, Society Building 14, Saturday, Program: One-Room Schoolhouses in Windham, followed by tour of Village Green Schoolhouse, 10AM to Noon 20, Friday, Village Green Schoolhouse Inaugural 5th Grade Class, Time TBD JUNE: 7, Tuesday, Board Meeting: WHS Building, 6:30 PM 25-26, Saturday, Sunday, 3rd Maine Civil War Infantry Company A, Village Green 25, Saturday, 3rd Maine in Summerfest Parade JULY: 5, Tuesday, Board Meeting: WHS Building, 6:30 PM 18, Monday, Program: Let There be Light, A History of Lanterns, WHS Building, 7:30 PM (Membership Meeting, 7 PM, before program) AUGUST 2, Tuesday, Board Meeting: WHS 6:30 PM 22, Monday, Program: Steamboats of Sebago, Windham Veterans Center, 7 PM Uncle Tom (cont.) The wallboards on which the posters were affixed were catalogued into the archives of the Society, and put in the only space available for storage – the attic at the circa 1830 brick Society building to await restoration, where they remain today Spring 2016 Page 7 Meet the New Volunteer Coordinator Page 7 The Society has a new Volunteer Coordinator. Please welcome Sue Graham as she takes the reins of this vital part of the Society. Sue will be actively seeking volunteers to help with ongoing Society projects, such as gardening, housekeeping, baking, fundraising, and construction work. Sue was born in Connecticut and grew up in Massachusetts. Her father was originally from Maine and moved back to the state to reside on the Haskell Family farm in Deer Isle. Sue’s sister later moved to Maine as well, as did Sue herself about 10 years ago, to help care for her aging parents. Sue is recently retired, but has held many accounting positions over the years, and most recently was employed by Walmart in Windham. Sue has always had a fascination for history and the lives of our ancestors. She joined the Windham Historical Society to help make the Village Green a reality and give today’s young people an accurate look at Windham’s past. If you’d like to help in that effort, please contact Sue at 894-5022 or by email at suewho2u@gmail.com. The Underground Railroad: The Windham Connection By Kay Soldier and Haley Pal The Underground Railroad was neither underground nor a railroad. It got its name because its activities had to be carried out in secret and those involved with the system used railroad terms to describe how that system worked. Various routes were lines, stopping at places called stations. Those who aided along the way were conductors and their charges were known as packages or freight. This vast network of people who helped fugitive slaves escape to the north and Canada, was not run by a single person or organization. It consisted of many individuals, several white, but predominantly black, who effectively moved hundreds of slaves northward each year. One estimate is that 100,000 slaves escaped to freedom between 1810 and 1850. A religious group called the Quakers (or Society of Friends) was very involved in the Underground Railroad. Many runaway slaves who were trying to get to Canada came through Maine. In Windham, there was a good-sized settlement of Quakers, and some of them hid runaways in their homes, barns, or in the orchards for a day at a time until they moved on to another safe place on their way to Canada. Travel was often by river, and Maine has plenty of them. The first family that settled in the “Quaker” area of Windham was the Pope family, and so the settlement became known as Popeville. In the early 1900s, an elderly woman named Phoebe Pope was interviewed by a Portland newspaper and told what she remembered about the Underground Railroad. The house where she lived is still standing, a two-story brick house on Pope Road. Phoebe Pope recalled that runaway slaves were hidden in the orchard there. There is a copy of the newspaper article in the archives of the Windham Historical Society. Slavery was legal in the days before the Civil War. People who helped hide runaway slaves were going against the law and could be fined thousands of dollars for breaking it. But many people believed slavery was wrong and should be abolished. These people, called abolitionists, continued to help despite the consequences. There are quite a few houses in Windham that are said to have secret rooms in their cellars which might have been used to hide runaway slaves. This is very difficult to prove, and to date, Phoebe Pope’s reminiscences are the only definite record. Business Partners who support the Windham Historical Society and this Newsletter: David Douglass AIA Maine and NH Licensed Architect 101 Whites Bridge Road Windham, Me 04062 207.807.6661 Windham Historical Society PO Box 1475 Windham, Maine 04062 234 Windham Center Road 207 892-1433