Monday, October 15, 2018

Our Hidden Landscape Stone Cultural Features & Native American Ceremonial Sites”

The Torrington Historical Society will host a FREE program on Wednesday, October 17th  in the Carriage House Gallery of the Torrington Historical Society, 192 Main Street.  The speaker will be Lucianne Lavin Ph.D., Director of Research and Collections at the Institute for American Indian Studies, Washington, CT.  Dr. Lavin’s PowerPoint program, titled, “Our Hidden Landscapes: Stone Cultural Features & Native American Ceremonial Sites” will begin at 6:30 p.m.  This presentation is sponsored by the Torrington Chapter of UNICO National.  Admission is free; donations are welcome.

This program will explore the topic of stone features, many of which can often be seen as we hike through the woods.  Although some of these are the remains of abandoned farmsteads and industrial mill sites, many others represent Native American ceremonial sites.  Dr. Lavin’s PowerPoint presentation will illustrate the various kinds of European-American and indigenous stone structures found on our Connecticut landscapes. Although State regulations support the preservation of sacred Native American sites, these sites are often not recognized for what they are and subsequently, have been destroyed by development and suburban sprawl.  Even on protected lands, destruction is possible through logging, landscaping, or building placement.  This program will help individuals and organizations learn more about these Native American stone features so that we can identify them and help aid in the preservation of these significant indigenous stone features.
Lucianne Lavin, Ph.D., is Director of Research and Collections at the Institute for American Indian Studies, a museum and research and educational center in Washington, CT.  Dr. Lavin is an anthropologist and archaeologist who has over 40 years of research and field experience in Northeastern archaeology and anthropology, including teaching, museum exhibits and curatorial work, cultural resource management, editorial work, and public relations.  She has owned and operated an archaeological firm for over 25 years.   In addition, Dr. Lavin is the author of over 150 professional publications and technical reports on the archaeology and ethnohistory of the Northeast.  Her award-winning book, Connecticut’s Indigenous Peoples: What Archaeology, History and Oral Traditions Teach Us About Their Communities and Cultures, was published by Yale University Press (spring 2013).  She is a founding member of the state’s Native American Heritage Advisory Council and Editor of the journal of the Archaeological Society of Connecticut.  
The program will begin promptly at 6:30.  For more information about the Torrington Historical Society, please visit www.torringtonhistoricalsociety.org.    

Friday, October 12, 2018

BY SEA BY AIR BY LAND: MILITARY ART AND ARTIFACTS 100 YEARS AFTER THE GREAT WAR

Coinciding with the 100th anniversary of the ending of World War I, the David M. Hunt Library in Falls Village (CT) will present in October and November the exhibit, By Sea By Air By Land: Military Art and Artifacts 100 Years after the Great War. Featuring maritime, aviation, and figurative artwork in painting, drawing, and photography by artists including Robert Andrew Parker, Pamela Berkeley, Robert Cronin, David Fertig and Lazlo Gyorsok, the exhibit also includes items from the Falls Village-Canaan Historical Society and from private collections. A reception with refreshments will take place at the Library on Saturday, October 20 from 4 to 6PM. The exhibit will remain on display through Saturday, November 24. David M. Hunt Library, 63 Main Street, Falls Village, CT, 06031. For more information call the Library at 860-824-7424 or visit huntlibrary.org. Hours: Tues 10-5, Thurs 10-5, Fri 3-7, Sat 10-1, Sun 11-1.
Not limited to the WWI era, the exhibit encompasses military culture, history and iconography from many countries and over several centuries from Pamela Berkeley’s portrait of the mythic knight Parsifal to an installation of Robert Andrew Parker’s wooden airplane models and a US 13th Cavalry uniform that saw service in the “Punitive Expedition” to capture Poncho Villa during the Mexican Revolution and the concluding battles in WWI France.  A maritime painting by Norman Wilkinson (1878-1971), the British artist who invented the technique of dazzle camouflage that helped improve the safety of ships against attack in WWI, is also featured.

The painter Dave Fertig is known for his focus on the age of Napoleon and Admiral Nelson through the lens of the New York School, while Lazlo Gyorsok’s photography captures historical reenactors’ enthusiasm for the American Revolution and the Civil War.  Geoffrey Parker’s wooden model of the 1904 USS Constitution shares space with Lillian Lovitt’s SS LOVBERG, another wooden model.  Ken Musselman’s painting, Mighty Mo, depicts sailors readying a 16-inch gun on the USS Missouri, while Robert Cronin shows the tenderness of a lonely couple on the deck of the RMS Lusitania.  Sergei Fedorjaczenko’s watercolor features a Zeppelin and escorts going out on a bombing raid and Mary Jeys depicts a galleon on fire.  Emily Rutgers Fuller provides a landscape of a watchtower used to spot submarines off the coast of Maine during WWII.  A woven rug of a colonial soldier by Hendon will also be in the exhibition. Also included are items from private collections and the Falls Village-Canaan Historical Society including two bas-relief plasters by sculptor Gertrude Lathrop (1896-1986) commemorating WWI.

Garth Kobal, the curator of the exhibit and one of its artists, was inspired to assemble By Sea By Air By Land through family research into Elzie Dillard Rigdon’s WWI service in the famous “All-American”  82nd Division of the 328th Infantry.  Pvt. Rigdon, then 24 years old from Alma, Georgia and the father of Mr. Kobal’s husband, was wounded by shrapnel and gas on October 8, 1918, during the decisive Meuse-Argonne campaign in France that helped bring the Great War to its conclusion. His injuries, earning him a Purple Heart, took place on the same day and about two miles from where Sergeant Alvin York, also in the 82nd Division, famously captured 132 German soldiers.

A family member located Pvt. Rigdon’s embarkation papers, which led to the discovery of a photograph of the Walmer Castle, a dazzle camouflage-painted British mail ship that transported the American Expeditionary Forces from Hoboken to Liverpool.  It was this image, Kobal said, “that brought E.D. and the whole conflict to life for me.  My husband’s dad—a young green farmer who I never met—sailed to WWI in a painting so-to-speak, experienced incredible hardship and injury, and was a participant in this brutal and devastating world-changing event.  I immediately sent the photo of the Walmer Castle to Robert Andrew Parker in Cornwall (CT) and he jumped on it, painting a pair of watercolors that are the starting point of this exhibit. Parker was integral to making the exhibit what it is as many of the artifacts featured in the exhibit are from his private collection.  Add to that his wooden airplane models, paintings, and etchings and you have an exhibit largely built around Parker’s work, one of our greatest living artists with a truly historical and twentieth-century perspective.”

Wednesday, October 10, 2018

If Your House Could Speak @ Wilton Historical Society

On Thursday, Oct. 11 from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. join Kelly Morron at the Wilton Historical Society located on 224 Danbury Rd. for a talk on how to research your historic home.



Have you ever wanted to learn more about your historic house, property or neighborhood? Do you ever wonder about who used to live in your historic house, and what they did for a living? Curious about the road’s interesting name, or why certain property features exist? Kelly Morron, a long time Wilton resident, had all these questions and more about her historic house and will present If Your House Could Speak: How to Research Your Historic Home. 
She will discuss how to research a historic structure through land records, deeds, maps, photographs, and other reference materials. Nick Foster, Collections Coordinator for the Society, will explain what kinds of resources are available in the Wilton Library’s History Room, which houses the archives and works on paper of the Wilton Historical Society. A light lunch is included.
Wilton Historical Society Members free, non-Members, $10 per person. Please register: info@wiltonhistorical.org or call 203-762-7257.

Tuesday, October 9, 2018

The Naugatuck Railroad’s Fall Foliage and Family Fun Trips

Enjoy the best of Connecticut’s fall foliage and take a train ride to the Pumpkin Patch where the kids can select their own pumpkin, and everyone can savor cider and donuts. The Railroad Museum Of New England’s Naugatuck Railroad kicks off its 11th Annual “Pumpkin Patch” Train Rides kicks off the first weekend in October.



"It's a great opportunity to fall in love with fall in Connecticut," shares Howard Pincus. Chairman of the Railroad Museum Of New England.  “Bring your cameras, capture the beauty of the season.  And great memories. Where else can you combine picking up a pumpkin and a trip back in time, aboard our restored rail cars? Only at the all-volunteer Railroad Museum of New England." 

Pumpkin Patch Trains are scheduled for Saturdays, Sundays throughout October at 10am, 12 noon and 2pm. After the children select their pumpkins and families take photos, passengers re-board the train for the ride back to the historic Thomaston Station. 

The fares are $18 for Adults and $16 for Seniors (age 62+) and Children (ages 3-12). Children 3 and under are only one dollar. Purchase tickets online at www.rmne.org or phone 860-283-7245 anytime.  All tickets are non-refundable and non-exchangeable.

Trains depart from Thomaston Station at 242 East Main St, Thomaston, Connecticut.  Tickets are picked up at Thomaston Station's “WILL CALL” window on the day of your train ride.  Please arrive at the Station 30 minutes before departure time.  Trains leave promptly at the scheduled times.



The RMNE, located at the historic Thomaston Train Station, is a not-for-profit, all-volunteer,, educational and historical organization that dates back to January 1968. The mission of the RMNE is to tell the story of the region’s rich railroad heritage through our educational exhibits and operation of the Naugatuck Railroad.  The museum concept is more than just artifacts; it's also a story of the region and the development of society around the railroad.


More information about the Railroad Museum of New England can be found at: www.rmne.org.

Two Hidden Tunnels in Litchfield Hills make an interesting autumn walk

Connecticut has a rich train and trolley history.  Even today, many commuters depend on the train to get them to work.  In the past, before the major commuter rail lines were established, tunnels were often carved out of living rock in order to connect towns to one another.  In Litchfield Hills, there are two examples of these tunnels, one in Plymouth and the other in Washington Connecticut.  These two tunnels are perfect places for an autumn stroll in the woods.


The Steep Rock Railroad Tunnel was constructed in just nine months between 1871 and 1872 in Washington Depot.  It was constructed as part of the Shepaug Valley Railroad. A crew of coal miners from Pennsylvania built this 235 foot long curved tunnel by hand using picks, dynamite and nitro to blast through Steep Rock Ridge. Today hikers can enjoy the cool damp air of this tunnel as they explore the natural beauty of Steep Rock Preserve.


The Pequabeck Tunnel also known as the Terryville Tunnel is located in Plymouth and is rumored to be haunted with reports of sightings of two ghostly figures.  The tunnel is about a half mile long and 32 feet wide and 26 feet high. The tracks ran as a passenger line for about twenty years, but currently, it is a still active freight line that connects New Britain to Waterbury.

Friday, October 5, 2018

Witchcraft in Colonial Connecticut

The Glebe House Museum will be kicking off the fall season of events with a brand new program; “Witchcraft in Colonial Connecticut”. Linda Barr-Gale will present the history and origins of the witch hunts in Colonial Connecticut, told from the voice of Moll Cramer, Woodbury’s very own infamous resident witch (or was she?)!  The program will take place on Saturday, Oct. 13 at 5 pm.  The cost is $12 members and $15 non-members. To register call 203-263-2855.



The keeping room of this historic house will come alive as Ms. Barr-Gale shares stories of other notable witches and tales about those who were hung for witchcraft. She will bring to light the heroes of the time and answer audience questions; all with a touch of humor!
Colonial treats and refreshments will be served. (Recipes will be available)

Linda Barr-Gale is a long time Glebe House Docent and Volunteer. Her portrayal of Moll Cramer during the Glebe’s “All Hollow’s Eve” event has made Moll one of the most popular spirits in the cemetery. Last year she presented a “one witch” show in the cottage at the Glebe during the event. While researching information to present about Moll Cramer’s full story, she became interested in the history and origins of the Connecticut Witch Trials. Her research was extensive and was much more than could be presented in such a short time during “All Hollow’s and so this program was born.

Thursday, October 4, 2018

New IMAX Movie @ Norwalk Maritime Aquarium Opening Oct. 5

The wonders and surprises of Earth’s “final frontier” will splash across the six-story IMAX Theater screen beginning on Fri., Oct. 5 with the premiere of “Oceans: Our Blue Planet” at The Maritime Aquarium at Norwalk.



This beautiful new film offers larger-than-life encounters with such familiar animals as dolphins, sea otters, and walruses, while also introducing unusual deep-sea species like “yeti” crabs, a barreleye fish and dumbo octopus. “Oceans: Our Blue Planet” will play at 11 a.m. and 2 & 4 p.m. daily through March 14, 2019.   It’s narrated by Academy Award-winning actress Kate Winslet, and sponsored locally by the Santa Family Fund.

“We’re excited to give audiences this inspiring, beautiful exploration of the world ocean,” said Dave Sigworth, the Aquarium’s publicist. “We love how the movie blends new discoveries, while also serving as a primer for those who are new to the ocean environment and issues affecting it. And, of course, it is spectacular on our IMAX screen.”

The Maritime Aquarium has the largest IMAX Theater in Connecticut. Its giant screen and 70mm film-projection system combine the brightest, clearest images at almost 10 times the resolution of standard-projection formats with powerful, laser-aligned digital sound and customized theater geometry to create the world's most immersive film experience.



The 41-minute movie transports audiences through ocean habitats of increasing depths, from coral reefs in warm tropical “shallows” to the surprisingly populated deep black sea. Among the encounters are those with a very cunning octopus and an ingenious tuskfish, whose use of a tool to feed was previously believed to be beyond the ability of fish.

“Even ocean creatures that we already knew were smart are continuing to surprise us,” Winslet says of a scene that has a pod of dolphins passing down knowledge to a young calf.
In kelp forests, the balance of nature plays out as sea urchins – which can ravage kelp – are kept in check by hungry urchin-eating sea otters.

And, thanks to technologies that take ocean exploration to new extremes, the film introduces audiences to such deep-sea creatures as “yeti” crabs (with “hairy white arms on which they farm bacteria to eat”) and a barreleye fish (“with a transparent head so that it can look up through its skull”).



“Oceans: Our Blue Planet” concludes in the Arctic to show that shrinking ice caps are creating new challenges for such animals as walruses and polar bears. “Just as we’re beginning to understand the sophisticated lives of sea creatures, so we begin to recognize the fragility of their home,” Winslet says. “There has never been a more crucial time to continue this journey of discovery because our future too depends on a healthy blue planet and who knows what other secrets are out there, waiting to be discovered.”

“Oceans: Our Blue Planet” is a collaboration between BBC Earth and OceanX Media, based during a global odyssey with researchers aboard Ocean X’s 184-foot research vessel, the M/V Alucia.

Other IMAX movies showing at The Maritime Aquarium this fall – and their show times beginning Oct. 5 – are “Backyard Wilderness” (noon daily) and “Pandas” (1 & 3 p.m. daily). One daytime

IMAX movie is included with Maritime Aquarium admission: $24.95 for adults; $22.95 for seniors (65+); and $17.95 for children (3-12).

Watch the three films’ trailers, access educational materials and purchase your tickets at www.maritimeaquarium.org/imax.

Thursday, September 27, 2018

From the Forest - Native American Porcupine Quill Art New Exhibit @ Institute For American Indian Studies

Native Americans have a deep artistic sense and a great knowledge of our natural environment. This aesthetic can be seen in the objects of art, both decorative and useful at the new exhibit, From the Forest at the Institute For American Indian Studies on 38 Curtis Road in Washington Connecticut. Porcupine quillwork looks amazingly like delicate embroidery. This type of quillwork was most likely the first purely decorative art practiced by Native Americans. It is highly sought after by collectors, each piece representing hundreds of hours of work by the artist.

Porcupine quillwork is a distinctive Native American art form. The quills are folded, twisted, wrapped, plaited and sewn using a wide range of techniques to embellish articles of clothing, bags, knife sheaths, baskets, wooden handles, pipe stems and many other items.. Native Americans in 17th century New England used porcupine quills to decorate their clothing and accessories. They would also decorate containers made from birchbark because it was light, long lasting and flexible.
Quill working flourished from New England to the tribes of the Great Plains until the arrival of Europeans with ready-made glass beads that were incorporated into the work. Although considered a 'lost art' by many, some artists still practice the tradition from tribes such as the Sioux, Cree, Ojibway, and others carrying on the tradition of quill embroidery.
The Exhibit
This exhibit showcases artifacts on loan to the museum from the Meg Buda Collection consisting of many Native American decorative and useful items that have been embellished with porcupine quill embroidery. There are examples of flat as well as tufted quill embroidery on a variety of objects from moccasins and baskets to jewelry and containers. Some of the workmanship on the tufted birchbark baskets is extraordinary because of the variety of natural dyes used on the quills and the delicate floral or geometric patterns on the containers. Examples of tufted quillwork are only made by a few artists and are extraordinary in their detail and craftsmanship. In addition to this exhibition, the Institute has a large collection of Native American Artifacts, a 16th century reconstructed outdoor  Native American Village and a new Escape Room that is opening in late October called Escape from a Wigwam, 1518.

Porcupine Quills
One of the most enduring myths about the porcupine, a member of the rodent family that is only native to North America is that they are capable of throwing quills. The reality is the porcupine uses their quills as a defense mechanism. When in danger, the porcupine lowers its head and lashes out its tail, and if the predator is in striking range, the barbed quills are embedded in their hide or on their face. Once embedded, the quill with its needle-sharp barbules expands and every muscle movement pulls it deeper into the flesh. The porcupine quill is a modified type of hair, and like hair, it is shed when it is fully-grown. An adult porcupine has an average of 30,000 quills on its body that average about three inches in length. The spring and fall porcupine quills are said to be the best for decorative use because they are not waterlogged and don't break easily. Once the quills were carefully removed from the porcupine they were sorted by size then made pliable by soaking. Dyed and flattened, woven, wrapped, tufted or stitched the humble porcupine quill became part of a work of art as well as a means of self-expression.
About Institute For American Indian Studies
Located on 15 woodland acres the IAIS has an outdoor Three Sisters and Healing Plants Gardens as well as a replicated 16th c. Algonkian Village. Inside the museum, authentic artifacts are displayed in permanent, semi-permanent and temporary exhibits from prehistory to the present that allows visitors a walk through time. The Institute for American Indian Studies is located on 38 Curtis Road in Washington Connecticut and can be reached online or by calling 860-868-0518. The Institute for American Indian Studies preserves and educates through discovery and creativity the diverse traditions, vitality, and knowledge of Native American cultures. Through archaeology, the IAIS is able to build new understandings of the world and history of Native Americans; the focus is on stewardship and preservation. This is achieved through workshops, special events, and education for students of all ages.

Monday, September 24, 2018

Wilton’s Architecture: An Update to the Historic House Survey

On Thursday, September 27 from 7:00 – 8:30 the public is cordially invited to an illustrated talk given by architectural historians Stacey Vairo of Scheller Preservation Associates and Lucas Karmazinas of FuturePast Preservation at the Wilton Historical Society. The pair has conducted a historic house survey primarily focused on buildings dating from 1920 – 1940 in Wilton, of which there are over 400.  In all, about 160 structures have been added to Wilton’s Historic Resource Inventory.  



The presentation will include information about how the survey was conducted and used,  interesting finds, areas that would be appropriate to be studied for historic district designation and much more.  The project has been funded by a Survey and Planning grant of $30,000 from Connecticut’s State Historic Preservation Office (SHPO) which was awarded to the Society in late 2016. At the lecture, owners of any buildings that appear on the lists will be able to pick up a copy of their home’s history.  Please register: info@wiltonhistorical.org or call 203-762-7257. 
Vairo and Karmazinas conducted the survey using a combination of research and a “windshield survey,” meaning they literally drove around Wilton looking at structures from the road or right of way (inventory surveys do not require access to the interior or rear of the structure), taking photos as they documented.  Some of the styles of the period include Colonial Revival, craftsman/bungalow, Spanish Eclectic, and Tudor revival, plus the distinctive stone houses designed by Westport architect Frazier Peters, and the stately homes of Wilton’s Nelson Breed.  They consulted old maps, researched within the town’s land records, genealogy records, the Society’s archives, and other resources including the History Room at the library. Discussions with Carol Russell, town historian, and Bob Russell, author of the definitive history of Wilton, and Society Co-Director/Chair, Historic District Commission Allison Gray Sanders, and local architect Rob Sanders were also helpful.

Please register: info@wiltonhistorical.org or call 203-762-7257

Thursday, September 20, 2018

Museum of Tort Law Presents Leaders in Law




The first presentation is  on September 27th  at 7 p.m. with legendary Attorney Thomas Girardi.  While Thomas Girardi has garnered many multi-million dollar verdicts, he is perhaps best known for the case against Pacific Gas & Electric Company. This case was the inspiration for the movie Erin Brockovich.   As Mr. Girardi commented: “That particular case revolutionized people’s thinking about all the toxic things they are exposed to. Then all of a sudden, people started to understand it and that’s had far-reaching effects clear up through today.”

Mr. Girardi will be interviewed and then offer a Master Class in a Town Hall-style format with the opportunity for live, interactive conversation. The Museum staff would like to invite you and your friends to attend.

This presentation is the first in a series of three.  The other two presentations scheduled for the Fall are: Thomas Fortune Fay, Esq, on November 8th and John Barylick, Esq. on December 6th.  

Tickets can be purchased at http://www.tortmuseum.org and are $20. If you have any questions please contact Joan Bowman, Director of Engagement at the Museum at joan@tortmuseum.org or call the Museum at 860-379-0505.

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Tuesday, September 18, 2018

The 37th Annual Family Nature Day! White Memorial Foundation Sept.22

Our annual celebration of Mother Nature is a must for folks of all ages. This 37th edition is chock full of the greatest presenters! Brian Bradley will be here with his beautiful free-flying hawks and falcons. 



Learn about Bats and Porcupines from Gerri GriswoldRiverside Reptiles’ Brian Kleinman is perhaps the greatest mind in reptiles in our state. 

Come visit the many friends he’ll be bringing along. Meet a Bald Eagle, Golden Eagle, and more with Horizon Wings Raptor Rehabilitation and Education Center! Music will be provided by The Redwood Hill Band and The Zolla Boys

The day is filled with live animals, guided nature walks, information booths, horse-drawn wagon rides, and yummy food provided by The Litchfield Lions ClubHardcore Cupcake Truck, and Cups and Cones Ice Cream. Shop until you drop at the artisans market. Get in a bidding war at our silent auction. 


Lots of nature crafts for the kiddies too! Will you be the winner of a trip for two to Iceland (donated by Krummi Travel LLC) with Gerri Griswold in January or be spending three nights in the Catskills at The Beaverkill Valley Inn? Those are the first and second prizes in our annual raffle! 


So much to do!  Feed your mind, body, and soul! 11:00 A.M. – 5:00 P.M., Admission: $6.00, Center Members and children under 12 are FREE!