Showing posts with label Architecture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Architecture. Show all posts

March 29, 2025

Hitty Makes Pancakes with Little Bear!

Maple Sugaring, A Family Tradition!

Hitty makes pancakes on the old wood cookstove. The little bear looks on with eager anticipation!



An Ancestral Old New England House!

My great great great grandmother's great grandparent's old house in Rhode Island. I love this house with its wonderful stone walls and maple trees! It was my 6th great grandfather's house.
Buckets are hung on the old maple tree for collecting sap.





Hitty and Little Bear enjoy their pancakes with goat's milk.
Real Maple syrup is in the bird jug.

 


Little Bear likes sticky things, honey and maple syrup are favorites! Yum!
Little Bear has been a well loved little bear. He is worn and is missing an ear but all the dolls at Corgyncombe think he is adorable!







 

 

 

 


Maple Sugar



At the Corgyncombe Forget-Me-Not Fair, pancakes, maple syrup, old fashioned doughnuts and apple cider can be found at Hitty Maple's booth.



Quackenbush excitedly quacks and flaps his wings and hops atop the bench and indicates that pancakes and doughnuts are amongst his favorite things! He is so happy to bring Dilley Dibble Dabble to visit this booth!

 
Quackenbush and Dilley Dibble Dabble have been featured at the Corgyncombe Courant for years. 

  
The pancakes are made right in the booth on an old wood cookstove.



What a pleasant sight it is to see the old buckets hung on the maple trees!



With the coming of spring, with freezing nights and warming days, the sap in the old sturdy maple trees starts its journey up the trees. For generations my family has harvested the sweetness of the maple tree. When I was a little girl I remember peeking into my grandfather's sugar house at night to see my grandfather and uncles tending the fires and skimming the foam from boiling sap pan.


Maple sugaring is a tradition in my family!



Some of the photographs and some of the writings on this post are from previous Corgyncombe Courant posts that can be found here on the Corgyncombe Courant and from our web site and our previous postings elsewhere on the internet.


Please do not "Pin" our photographs.
Please do not post our photographs on facebook.


Our email:
atthecottagegate@yahoo.com
If you receive an email you think is from me from this email, please make sure it is atthecottagegate@yahoo.com, and not just something that sounds similar.


Photographs, images, and text copyright © 2000-2025 Diane Shepard Johnson and Sarah E. Johnson.
All rights reserved. Photographs, images, and/or text may not be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from Diane Shepard Johnson and Sarah E. Johnson.


https://corgyncombecourant.blogspot.com/2025/03/hitty-makes-pancakes-with-little-bear.html
copyright © 2025 Diane Shepard Johnson and Sarah E. Johnson

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

March 20, 2024

Tasha Tudor's Historic New Hampshire Farm, The Old Gerrish Homestead!

The Old Gerrish Homestead!

In "Drawn from New England" Bethany Tudor wrote about how her mother, Tasha Tudor, found a delightful old house and farm in New Hampshire. Even though the house was in disrepair Tasha could see beyond it and her artist's eye could see how wonderful it could be! Tasha bought the old house and farm from an old man named Ed Gerrish in 1945. Ed Gerrish's great grandfather Moses Gerrish built the house about 1789. I was thrilled to discover that the Gerrish family that built and owned the New Hampshire house and farm was related to me!

 

The old photograph shows the Gerrish Homestead (built about 1789 by Moses Gerrish) in about 1869. The house was later owned by Tasha Tudor. Ed Gerrish was born in 1867. Perhaps he could be the little child in the photo standing by his mother. Photograph courtesy of the Webster Historical Society.

 

Moses Gerrish's father Col. Henry Gerrish was 2nd cousin to my 6th great grandfather John Hale. Both Henry and John served in the Revolutionary War. Col. Henry Gerrish and John Hale were first cousin and second cousin, respectively, to Nathan Hale the great American patriot.


We found that Moses Gerrish's grandmother was Joanna (Hale) Gerrish. 'Tis no surprise that her name would have been Joanna! In my branch it is a well known Hale family name. The first Hale of the line in New England was Robert Hale and his wife was Joanna. The name Joanna appeared in every generation of Hales down the line in my family (except for one generation which only had sons). Each generation of Hales had a sister Joanna. Nathan Hale, too, had a sister named Joanna.


Tasha Tudor encouraged my daughter and I in our genealogical pursuits and she wrote to us:

"That fine red envelope full of photographs and the pages of Family names, was no end impressive."

 

"Have fun with your genealogical researches. What fun!!"
 
 
The house built by Moses Gerrish about 1789 was lived in by several generations of the Gerrish family, including Moses' grandsons: brothers Henry H. Gerrish and James L. Gerrish. Henry and James both had wives named Sarah, who were referred to in a written family history as "Sarah Henry" and "Sarah James", to note which Sarah was being spoken of. They all lived in the old Gerrish house. James Gerrish was the father of Ed Gerrish who later sold the farm to Tasha Tudor in 1945.


James Gerrish served for the Union during the Civil War as part of the New Hampshire Volunteers. Tasha Tudor's dolls Captain Shakespeare and Lieut. Thaddeus Crane both also served in the New Hampshire Volunteers. The wedding of Lieut. Thaddeus Crane and lovely Melissa was held at the old Gerrish house and was featured in "Life" Magazine. Melissa was Tasha Tudor's model for the doll in "A is for Annabelle".

James Gerrish was engaged to Sarah Chandler just before he left for service in the Civil War. They were then married in 1864.


James Gerrish's daughter wrote about how although his responsibilities to care for his family as a farmer meant perhaps he could not pursue another career, he was artistically inclined and he appreciated and found beauty in his life. He raised dairy cows and sheep. He built stone walls. Whilst he was doing work about the farm James made up poems for his daughter. He planted a row a mile and a quarter long of maple trees by the road for tapping and for the pleasure to the senses. He thought this would be a long lasting remembrance of him after he was gone. I remember even as a child appreciating rows of big old maple trees along both sides of the road and also old stone walls, how special!


James Gerrish's brother Henry H. Gerrish's wrote diaries in which he described work and happenings about the farm. In reading them, one can see that they collected sap and did maple sugaring, attended sugaring parties, harvested their own ice and packed it in sawdust, did haying, grew apples, potatoes and other crops, as well as many of the old fashioned tasks that my families also did.


It is interesting to see the perspective from the previous generations' experiences in the same house that Tasha Tudor lived in and experienced some of the same things, too.


James L. Gerrish's daughter Mabel (Ed's sister) wrote down her recollections and stories of the farm and her family.


One can follow through Tasha Tudor's Around the Year and other books and illustrations and see similarities. Tasha Tudor drew many things done on the farm in previous days. "Becky's Birthday", "Becky's Christmas", "Adventures of a Beagle", and "Biggity Bantam" all have Tasha's illustrations of the New Hampshire farm.

 

Mabel wrote of coming home from school to her mother's "cozy kitchen" through the pantry, which was filled with wonderful things to eat such as pie, doughnuts, cake or cookies. Her description makes me think of Tasha Tudor's detailed illustrations of the pantry and butt'ry with the many things stored there.


Mabel also mentioned that raspberries and blueberries were picked on the farm and made into pies. In Around the Year folks are shown picking berries and having a picnic in July with a pie in the border.

 

Mabel wrote that her aunt visited her mother's kitchen especially during the time that the peaches were ripe. Around the Year shows a busy kitchen with the ladies putting up peaches.


One year at Thanksgiving when the Gerrishes had many relatives there for dinner in the old kitchen, there was a big snowstorm and some folks had to stay overnight. Mabel spoke highly of the pumpkin pies that were made in the brick oven. During part of the party the children dressed up in old fashioned clothes.

 

Mabel enjoyed coasting and skating in the winter. Each year a different family in the school district would have a large Christmas tree and everyone would come to the party with gifts, there would music and treats. In Around the Year Tasha Tudor, of course, featured coasting, skating, and a family gathered around the Christmas tree.


Mabel fondly remembered the attic and mentioned some of the old things found there: spinning wheels, cheese presses, old foot stoves, and the big wooden loom. Also in the attic were items related to fashions of the past: hoop skirts and "Godey's Lady's Book" fashion magazines. Perhaps some were of the same time and style as Tasha Tudor's illustrations in the miniature fashion magazines and catalogs that she made for the dolls and critters. The old things in the attic sound like things that Tasha and I would both get excited about!

 

Tasha Tudor delighted, as we do, in refined, simple elegance, in a country way, and the combining of the every day old fashioned tasks as our ancestors did, with artistic skill that could be seen by the beauty in their accomplished results... such as baskets, clothing, gardens, pottery, textiles, furniture, food preparation, architecture, and even their tools.


Mabel learned to read from her mother and her older college aged brother Ed. When one of Ed's professors came to visit the Gerrishes, he saw that Mabel, a little girl at the time, was reading books that he considered advanced for her age, he sent her the book "Mother Goose". Mabel cherished this "Mother Goose" for many years to come! Later, Tasha Tudor illustrated her version of "Mother Goose" (1944) and used the money she made from it to buy the old Gerrish home.


Henry H. Gerrish's diaries and Mabel (Gerrish) Page's stories can be found at the Webster Historical Society.
Photograph of the Gerrish homestead about 1869 courtesy of the Webster Historical Society.

 

 

Some of the photographs and some of the writings on this post are from previous Corgyncombe Courant posts that can be found here on the Corgyncombe Courant and from our web site and our previous postings elsewhere on the internet.


Please do not "Pin" our photographs.
Please do not post our photographs on facebook.



Our email:
atthecottagegate@yahoo.com
If you receive an email you think is from me from this email, please make sure it is atthecottagegate@yahoo.com, and not just something that sounds similar.



Photographs, images, and text copyright © 2000-2024 Diane Shepard Johnson and Sarah E. Johnson.
All rights reserved. Photographs, images, and/or text may not be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from Diane Shepard Johnson and Sarah E. Johnson.

 

http://corgyncombecourant.blogspot.com/2024/03/tasha-tudors-historic-new-hampshire.html
copyright © 2024 Diane Shepard Johnson and Sarah E. Johnson
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

December 25, 2019

Lady Ann and Lady Abigail at Christmastide!

Gathering the Greens!
Lady Ann adding a bow to the wreath that she made.




Before the snows, Ann went out to gather rose hips and boxwood.


Byberry Cottage, home of Susan Fenimore Cooper, the authoress of "Rural Hours", published 1850.





 
 Lady Abigail as the first flakes from the winter storm Ezekiel started coming down.


 The trim on Byberry Cottage reminds us of Lady Abigail's Christmas tussie mussie and frilly white cap!


Lady Abigail was named after Abigail (Gibbs) Swift who was my 7th great grandmother. Abigail's family was also related to Tasha Tudor. Abigail (Gibbs) Swift was the great granddaughter of Richard Warren who came on the Mayflower in 1620.

The name Abigail was passed down from Abigail (Gibbs) Swift to each generation of my family, continuing on to my great great grandfather's sister Mary Abigail (Taylor) Bassett. My great great grandfather served in the Civil War. Mary and her brother's grandfather and two great grandfathers all served in the Revolutionary war. Mary Abigail's obituary said she was "always ready to stand for the right as she saw the right with all the fortitude of her puritan ancestry." Like Tasha and myself, Mary Abigail liked to pick and arrange bouquets of wild flowers. It was reported in the paper that Mary Abigail won a prize for her wild flower bouquet! Mary Abigail lived just around the corner from Susan Fenimore Cooper, the authoress of "Rural Hours". Susan Fenimore Cooper oft' times wrote about the wild flowers.


When lit, the Advent wreath creates such lovely shadows and light on the ceiling at Corgyncombe.


The Dundee cake is brought out to be served with tea.
With the coming of Christmas, Dundee cakes are delicious at teas throughout December!


 Lady Ann mixing up a pudding. 






This book, "Little Bird Red and Little Bird Blue, A Tale of the Woods" by M. Betham Edwards, originally belonged to Susan Fenimore Cooper's niece Susie Cooper. She received it as a Christmas gift in 1863.

"Susie Cooper with a Merry Christmas"


Sparrows at the Corgyncombe bird feeder.
Feeding and watching the birds are pleasant winter activities.
The birds are always such a joy to watch and to hear!


Jenny Wren Lindenwood weaves on a Jonathan Seidel tape loom in the parlour in front of the fire.








Lady Ann loves to weave on her own loom also made by Jonathan Seidel.
 Lady Ann's trug full of boxwood and rose hips.

 I seem to have, when visiting antique shops, an ability to pick out items all previously owned by the same person. Things that I treasure, they treasured.

Those who have been reading the Corgyncombe Courant, might remember my posts telling about how I went in an antique shop and started picking out things that I loved that I found out from the owner of the shop, had belonged to a lady named Martha. I found baskets, a bird cage, doll clothes, a wooden box, a mirror in the shape of a heart, quilts and other things. The embroidered running deer quilt is one of them.

I found out that Martha lived without electric and running water! She did her cooking and baking on an old wood cook range. I had to find out more about this lady! Later I found out that Martha was a gardener, loved watching the birds, looking at stars in the night sky, dolls, genealogy, and teaching Sunday School! I wish I could have known her, as true kindred spirits are a delight to find!





Lady Ann has made Shrewsbury cakes for tea.

Lady Ann was named after my 9th great grandmother Lady Ann Borodell wife of Capt. George Denison, who lived near Mystic, Connecticut. Their daughter Margaret married James Brown, grandson of John Howland and Elizabeth (Tilley) Howland who came on the Mayflower. James and Margaret were my 8th great grandparents. We also have many other Anns in our ancestral family. 








A beautiful Tufted Titmouse in flight!


"December 19th, Long walk over the hills. We passed a cart standing in the woods, well loaded with Christmas greens, for our parish church. Pine and hemlock are the branches commonly used among us for the purpose; the hemlock, with its flexible twigs, and the grayish reverse of its foliage, produces a very pretty effect. We contributed a basket-full of ground-pine, both the erect and running kinds, with some glittering club-moss, and glossy pipsissiwa, for our share; it is not every year that we can procure these more delicate plants, as the snow is often too deep to find them."
~ "Rural Hours", published 1850,
by Susan Fenimore Cooper


The church the Coopers attended. How lovely it is in the new fallen snow!

Susan's father James Fenimore Cooper saw to the remodeling of the church in the Gothic Revival style in 1840.

The Cooper family is buried in the churchyard.
"December 25th, Christmas-day - But even under a cloudy sky, Christmas must always be a happy, cheerful day; the bright fires, the fresh and fragrant greens, the friendly gifts, and words of good-will, the "Merry Christmas" smiles on most faces one meets, give a warm glow to the day, in spite of a dull sky, and make up an humble accompaniment for the exalted associations of the festival, as it is celebrated in solemn, public worship, and kept by the hearts of believing Christians. "
~ "Rural Hours", published 1850,
by Susan Fenimore Cooper







 




Making Dundee cakes for tea is another tradition around Christmas time at Corgyncombe Cottage.
During the days before Christmas, delicious and festive Dundee cakes are enjoyed at tea time.
At the Corgyncombe Bakery I make many Dundee cakes in all different shapes and sizes.
Dundee cakes are made a month ahead of time and put in cold storage until time for St. Nicholas Tea.


'Tis now the season when we make apple, orange, lemon, and lime pomanders. After the cloves have been put in all round the fruit, it is rolled in an orris root and cinnamon mixture.  Orris root is a ground powder from the rhizomatous roots of Iris Florentina. Pomanders, with their pleasing scent, have long been a tradition at our house at Christmastide!




A receipt for Dundee Cake is in "The Tasha Tudor Cookbook".

I never add the citron nor the raisins as called for in the receipt, but add more than the called for amount of currants and in addition to the almonds in the receipt, add walnuts.

This combination makes the most delicious Dundee cake!

In her cookbook Tasha Tudor says to decorate the top of the Dundee cake with cherries and almonds. I have always decorated my Dundee cakes in a different pattern than those that I have seen Tasha illustrate. I use the cherry as the center with almonds or other nuts around the cherries forming flower-like shapes. I also use the currants to decorate the top of the Dundee cake.


Eliakim and Lydia Corgi.




I took the photograph of the chickadee several years ago, as St. Nicholas Day morn dawned snowy, sparkly white!


How lovely the light of the design shines!
I love this little lantern and how cheerfully the lantern light sparkles!


Rose Hips hanging from the mantel and an old English shepherd's staff alongside.


The sheep in the stable remind me of my own. Raising sheep has long been a tradition in my family for many generations. In addition, my direct family surnames include both Shepard/Shepherd and Angel... puts one in a Christmastide mood!


The Advent wreath from the outside looking in through the old wavy glass.


Silent Night at Corgyncombe




Our old fashioned table top Christmas tree like my Grandmum always had! The tree is surrounded by an old fashioned fence.

"December 25th, Christmas-day - It is, in good sooth, Merry Christmas! The day is bright with blessings; all its hours are beaming with good and kindly feelings, with true and holy joys."
~ "Rural Hours", published 1850,
by Susan Fenimore Cooper


Some of the photographs and some of the writings on this post are from previous Corgyncombe Courant posts that can be found here on the Corgyncombe Courant and from our web site and our previous postings elsewhere on the internet.

Please do not "Pin" our photographs.
Please do not post our photographs on facebook.

Our email:
atthecottagegate@yahoo.com
If you receive an email you think is from me from this email, please make sure it is atthecottagegate@yahoo.com, and not just something that sounds similar.


Photographs, images, and text copyright © 2000-2019 Diane Shepard Johnson and Sarah E. Johnson. All rights reserved. Photographs, images, and/or text may not be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from Diane Shepard Johnson and Sarah E. Johnson.

http://corgyncombecourant.blogspot.com/2019/12/lady-ann-and-lady-abigail-at.html
copyright © 2019 Diane Shepard Johnson and Sarah E. Johnson
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~