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Showing posts from July, 2022

National Park Service: World Ranger Day

Today is World Ranger Day! As a former park ranger and current Volunteer-In-Park , I volunteered at Slater Mill , part of Blackstone River Valley National Historic Park (BRVNHP).

Historic New England: Roseland Cottage

Several weeks ago, on July 3, I visited Roseland Cottage in Woodstock, Connecticut. Called the “Pink House” by locals, the house and grounds are the only Connecticut property managed by Historic New England  (HNE). Constructed in 1846 by the Bowen family, Roseland Cottage combines a 19 th century Gothic Revival exterior with several generations of renovation on the interior. The property is listed as a National Historic Landmark as the Henry C. Bowen house.

American Clock & Watch Museum

During my trip to Bristol, Connecticut, where I also visited the New England Carousel Museum and Rockwell Park, I went to the American Clock & Watch Museum , a member of the New England Museum Association (NEMA). The museum resides in a building constructed by Bristol resident Miles Lewis in 1801. The building is on the National Register of Historic Places managed by the National Park Service as part of the Federal Hill Historic District .

Rockwell Park in Bristol, CT

On the same day as my visit to the New England Carousel Museum , I took a walk around Rockwell Park in Bristol, Connecticut . This small city park is a great outing for the people of Bristol and the surrounding area.

New England Carousel Museum

A few weeks ago, I visited the New England Carousel Museum in Bristol, CT. This delightful member of the New England Museum Association (NEMA) is among the largest permanent collections of carousel animals in the country. The museum explained the history of carousels, demonstrated how carousels animals were constructed, and highlighted modern carousel creators. As a bonus, the museum had a working carousel inside the building.

Happy Birthday! Northbridge, MA

The town of Northbridge, Massachusetts has been celebrating its 250 th birthday. Incorporated on July 14, 1772, the last major celebration was held during the bicentennial in 1972. Small town birthdays are not what they use to be, but the cute parade down Main Street contained several highlights from New England history. Here are a few of my favorites.

Historic New England: Eleazer Arnold House & Clemence-Irons House

I visited Eleazer Arnold House and Clemence-Irons House on the same day, as they are very similar houses! Both are stone-enders, a 17 th century style located in Northern Rhode Island. These houses earned their name from their distinct “stone end”, a side of the house completely covered by a massive limestone chimney. Inside the house, three fireplaces over two floors connect to that same chimney. Although similar in design, visitors to Arnold House and Clemence-Irons House can immediately tell them apart. Arnold House was referred to as a “Splendid Mansion”, although it pales in comparison to modern houses, while Clemence-Irons was a standard, upper middle class family home in its day. Although the buildings appear authentic, historians and architects do not know if the houses appeared exactly this way closer to the time of their construction. Both houses underwent extensive renovation in the past three hundred years and more. Their current state reflects the research of...

Historic New England: Gropius House

When thinking of historical houses in New England, we often picture a Georgian style from around the mid-18th century or the time of the American Revolutionary War, or an opulent mansion from the late-19th to early-20th century, also called the American Gilded Age or late Victorian Era. However, Gropius House was build in 1938, right before World War II, by a German family fleeing the Third Reich of the Nazi party. Walter and Ise Gropius designed the unique house, which still houses its original furniture and décor, while their thirteen-year-old daughter Ati gave input. Not far from Codman Estate in Lincoln, MA,  the house belongs to Historic New England (HNE) and was designated as a National Historic Landmark by the National Park Service in 2000. The house combines elements of a traditional New England Colonial style and the German Bauhaus style. Other external features of the house include a winding metal staircase connected to Ati’ s bedroom, climbing roses, and an ou...

Historic New England: Codman Estate

A few weeks ago, I visited Codman Estate , called “The Grange” by former owners, which is located in Lincoln, Massachusetts and operated by Historic New England . Built as a plantation house and later serving as a summer estate, five generations of the Codman family lived in the house and filled it with their extensive collections. Because the house was gifted to HNE by the family in 1968, all materials in the house are original and belonged to the Codmans and their relatives. The house currently hosts two regular tours, the Servants Tour and the House Tour , which take place on the second and fourth Saturdays of the month.