Showing posts with label Quaker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Quaker. Show all posts

December 31, 2015

Hitty, Block Island, Mystic Seaport, Pirates and Roses!

Celebrating Tasha Tudor's 100th Birthday Year!
Hitty Hannah Austin Rose was named after my 5th great grandmother Hannah Austin Rose, wife of James Rose, who lived on Block Island, Rhode Island. The Rose family of Block Island descended from Tormut Rose from Scotland, said to have come to New England as a Prisoner of War after the Battle of Dunbar in 1650.
Hitty Hannah Austin Rose is inhaling the beautiful scent of the David Austin rose selected as Corgyncombe's choice for adding to our cottage garden this past year.
 

The gravestone on Block Island of my 5th great grandmother Hannah Austin Rose, wife of James Rose.

In Memory of
Hannah wife of Mr.
James Rose,
who departed this Life
December 1st 1791 in the
60th year of her Age.
She was a Kind wife, a tender
Parent, and beloved by all her
Aquaintance.

The Corgyncombe Courant thanks their dear friends for the use of the above photograph.


The Block Island North Lighthouse.
The Corgyncombe Courant thanks their dear friends for the use of the above photograph.


Hitty Hannah Austin Rose wanted to see an old tall ship like in Rachel Field's book "Hitty, Her First Hundred Years". In the book, Hitty accompanies Phoebe Preble and her family on a whaling expedition. Phoebe's father was Captain of the whaling ship they sailed on.

At Mystic Seaport in Connecticut her dream came true as she went aboard the Charles W. Morgan, the last surviving American whaling ship.  The Charles W. Morgan was built in 1841 and first launched from New Bedford, Massachusetts.

The Charles W. Morgan at Mystic Seaport.
Hitty was thrilled!


Hitty Hannah Austin Rose at the helm of the Charles W. Morgan.
It was a beautiful moment for Hitty as she felt almost as if she had returned to her ship.
All the memories of Hitty's adventures on the whaler came to her mind!
Here you can see the serene expression of awe and emotion in Hitty's face as she gazes up at the sails.

Looking up at the sails of the Charles W. Morgan.

As we explored the ship, it felt like Hitty was showing us around!

Coming up from below deck on the Charles W. Morgan; the loveliest blue sky!

 One of the Captains who sailed on the Charles W. Morgan was Capt. John Tinkham.
Captain Tinkham was a distant cousin of ours through our Tinkham family and we also share ancestor Peter Brown, a Mayflower passenger.
Capt. Tinkham had this special cabin made on deck for his wife as Mrs. Clara Tinkham suffered from seasickness.


Tillie Tinkham, the seamstress mouse at Corgyncombe, made herself comfortable in the bed in Mrs. Tinkham's cabin on board the Charles W. Morgan. She was quite taken by the delightful quilt that looks to have pieced "sails", on Mrs. Tinkham's bed.


In Rachel Field's book "Hitty, Her First Hundred Years", the ship that Hitty sailed on with the Prebles was first called the "Diana" and later called the "Diana Kate".
Above, Hitty looks out at Tasha Tudor's illustration of the "Diana" in the book "Wings from the Wind". One can see the name "Diana" on the ship.



The Whale Oil Lamps exhibit at Old Sturbridge Village.



The silent film "Down to the Sea in Ships" was released in 1923. The Charles W. Morgan was one of the ships used in the movie.
One thinks that perhaps Rachel Field could have seen this movie and been inspired by various things featured; the whaling ship and the detailed whaling adventure, the Quaker families, and dolls dressed as Quakers belonging to Patience Morgan the Quakeress. In the movie Clara Bow plays saucy Dot Morgan, who rebels against her strict grandfather and stows away on the whaling ship, disguised as a boy. Dot's friend Jimmie is the cabin boy on the ship.


In the early 1800s my third great grand uncle Nathan Herrington was a cabin boy on a ship that sailed out of New London, Connecticut.

In Rachel Field's book "Hitty, Her First Hundred Years", published in 1929, Hitty goes on a whaling ship with Phoebe Preble and her family and later in the book Hitty dons Quaker dress and lives with a Quaker girl named Clarissa.


Hitty Rachel, who insists on being called Hitty Content when in Quaker dress, at the Quaker Meetinghouse (originally in Bolton, Massachusetts) at Old Sturbridge Village.
Some of my Quaker ancestors were from Dartmouth, Massachusetts, which is very close to New Bedford, Massachusetts.


The New Shoreham Life-Saving Station was built on Block Island and moved to Mystic Seaport.
New Shoreham is another name for Block Island.



Captain Kidd from Scotland, was said to be a pirate.
In the Tasha Tudor illustration of Captain Kidd in "Wings from the Wind", we see a little boy and his corgi peeking apprehensively out from behind the barrel. Hitty had an urge to run into a comforting pocket to make a hasty retreat from Captain Kidd!
Captain Kidd was said to have stopped at Block Island and was rumored to have given Mercy (Sands) Raymond an apron full of gold in payment for room and board for himself and a woman he referred to as his wife.


As Hitty gazed into the looking glass, with its sailing motif, recollections of Hitty's time aboard the "Diana Kate" with Captain Preble and his family came to her mind. The looking glass is a reproduction of an old one from the Bixby house at Old Sturbridge Village.

The Bixby house at Old Sturbridge Village. Emerson and Laura (Doane) Bixby lived in the house in the 1800s. Laura was a distant cousin of ours through our Doane family who in early New England were from Cape Cod in Massachusetts.


Hitty Hannah Austin Rose's reflection in the looking glass at the Bixby house.


This old box decorated with a boat on exhibit at Old Sturbridge Village caught Hitty's eye.


Nanny Nettie-Kin readies tea for the girls.
Behind Nanny is a lovely old Victorian tea cozy.


Hitty Hannah Austin Rose and Hitty Sue have tea using Nanny Nettie-Kin's favorite Rose teapot and discuss roses, museums, genealogy, pirates and the sea!





Both Mystic Seaport and Old Sturbridge Village are wonderful museums with outstanding exhibits!

We have many, many more photographs of both museums that we hope to feature on the Corgyncombe Courant in the future.

Happy New Year to our Dear Readers!
 
 
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.
 
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 © 2000-2015 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/2015/12/hitty-block-island-mystic-seaport.html
copyright © 2015 Diane Shepard Johnson and Sarah E. Johnson
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

June 17, 2015

Hitty Visits the Quaker Meetinghouse at Old Sturbridge Village!

To Be Most Content!
Hitty looks peaceful and content at the window in the Quaker Meetinghouse at Old Sturbridge Village. Hitty likes to be called Hitty Content when she is wearing Quaker dress, as above.

Several of our ancestors were Quaker, including my 4th great grandmother who was named Content Hoag. Content was also (through a different family line of mine) my 4th great grandfather Abram Hoag's first cousin.

Hitty Content said "Thank thee, Tillie, for making me a Quaker outfit!"

Hitty's Quaker frock with pleats about the waist of the skirt and at the shoulders of the sleeves, her fichu, and cap were made by the talented little Tillie Tinkham, seamstress mouse for the dolls at Corgyncombe.  Tillie patterned the little ruffled cap after the "Cap for a Young Member of the Society of Friends" in "The Workwoman's Guide, By A Lady, A Guide to 19th Century Decorative Arts, Fashion and Practical Crafts, 1838".

In referencing bunnies and knitted rabbit wool items from Beatrix Potter's stories and a knitting pattern, Tasha Tudor mentioned "The Workwoman's Guide". Tasha Tudor wrote to us:



"You must have read Sarah 'The Tale of the Flopsy Bunnies.' Remember they gave Mrs. Tittlemouse enough rabbit wool to knit several pairs of muffatees?! 'The Workwoman's Guide' has directions. Maybe you also own this invaluable work?"

We at Corgyncombe find that "The Workwoman's Guide" is indeed a most valuable guide. It contains information, patterns, and instructions relating to bonnets and caps, collars, stitches, shawls, frocks, sleeves, knitting, household items, and many other things. The book has instructions for making little stitches and "neat" and "neatly" are predominant words.

Tillie Tinkham is in agreement with Tasha Tudor: "The Workwoman's Guide" is an "invaluable work"!

The year 2015 marks the 100th anniversary of Tasha Tudor's birth in 1915!

Nanny Nettie-Kin reminds us of Tasha Tudor and we and the dolls and critters of Corgyncombe will be celebrating this, the 100th year since Tasha Tudor's birth!

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 previous postings elsewhere on the internet.


The Quaker Meetinghouse at Old Sturbridge Village


Inside the Quaker Meetinghouse at Old Sturbridge Village.
The women sat on one side in the Friends' Meetinghouse and the men sat on the other.



My Grandmum and Grandfather were both of early New England Quaker descent. Both of their families started out in Massachusetts, north of Boston in the Newbury area and south of Boston in the Dartmouth area. Their Quaker families, known as the Society of Friends, then settled in an area known as the Oblong.

The Oblong was a long, narrow strip of land whose ownership was disputed between Connecticut and New York. In this long, narrow strip, my Quaker families settled and lived.

"The History of Dutchess County, New York" edited by Frank Hasbrouck, published 1909, says the following: "The Oblong Patent, covering a narrow strip along the east borders of Dutchess, Putnam and Westchester counties, was ceded to the State of New York by Connecticut, May 14, 1731."


Inside the Friends' Meetinghouse at Old Sturbridge Village.


May apple blossoms at sunrise down near Corgi Creek.

Tasha Tudor was inspired by the movie "Friendly Persuasion" to illustrate the endpapers of "Around the Year". The endpapers of "Around the Year" show a couple riding in a horse and buggy, crossing a creek, with lovely countryside round with sheep and cows to pasture.


The Quaker Meetinghouse at Old Sturbridge Village.

The movie "Friendly Persuasion" was about a Quaker family amidst the Civil War. The movie's introduction song is so lovely accompanying this post.




Looking down from upstairs in the Friends' Meetinghouse at Old Sturbridge Village.

In the book "Hitty, Her First Hundred Years" by Rachel Field, the original Hitty finds herself living with a Quaker family with a little girl named Clarissa Pryce.  After Clarissa found Hitty's name had been cross-stitched on her chemise she told her: "Thee must have been thought highly of, Hitty, to wear coral beads and thy name in cross-stitch, too." Clarissa sewed a Quaker frock, fichu and cap for Hitty and said "Now she looks like a true Friend". In the book, the Quaker poet John Greenleaf Whittier visited the Pryce family and met Hitty. He was pleased Hitty was in Quaker dress and he wrote a poem about Hitty that appears in Rachel Field's book "Hitty, Her First Hundred Years":

"These verses are in praise of thee,
Thou finger's length of modesty,
Whose tranquil brow and dress of gray
Become thee more than bright array."

The time that Hitty spends with Clarissa Pryce is our favorite part of the book "Hitty, Her First Hundred Years".


The Quaker Meetinghouse at Old Sturbridge Village.

We have the featured antique caps and "The Workwoman's Guide" before at the Corgyncombe Courant.
Here is a link to:

Here is a link to another post featuring our Quaker ancestors at the Corgyncombe Courant:
A Carriage Ride Along Corgi Creek!
May Day Delights!


Here are links to our previous posts in the series of
"Hitty's Journey and Adventures
at Old Sturbridge Village"
at the
Corgyncombe Courant:


Hitty Visits Old Sturbridge Village, Freeman Farm!

At Old Sturbridge Village Hitty Finds George Washington!

Hitty, Tasha Tudor Birthday Celebration,



Here is a link to:
Old Sturbridge Village



Our email:
atthecottagegate@yahoo.com



http://corgyncombecourant.blogspot.com/2015/06/hitty-visits-quaker-meetinghouse-at-old.html
copyright © 2015 Diane Shepard Johnson and Sarah E. Johnson
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

May 12, 2011

Charming, Quaint, and Romantic!

Grandfather Goes Courtin'!
An old photograph of Diane's Grandmum in her wedding frock along with an antique camera. Diane aspires to do portrait photography with old cameras such as this using the Corgyncombe Antique Clothing Collection.


May apple blossoms at sunrise down near Corgi Creek.


Diane's Grandmum in her wedding frock.
Grandmum had lovely light blue eyes and long dark brown hair which she put up, which Grandfather loved!

Diane's Grandmum and Grandfather were both of early Quaker descent. Both of their families started out in Massachusetts, north of Boston in the Newbury area and south of Boston in the Dartmouth area. Their Quaker families, known as the Society of Friends, then settled in an area known as the Oblong.

The Oblong was a long, narrow strip of land whose ownership was disputed between Connecticut and New York. In this long, narrow strip, Diane's Quaker families settled and lived.

"The History of Dutchess County, New York" edited by Frank Hasbrouck, published 1909, says the following: "The Oblong Patent, covering a narrow strip along the east borders of Dutchess, Putnam and Westchester counties, was ceded to the State of New York by Connecticut, May 14, 1731."


Diane's Grandfather Goin' Courtin' with horse and buggy.
Grandfather had brown eyes and red hair, which Grandmum loved!


Imagine riding in a horse and buggy along the lovely rolling hills, with the only sounds being the horses hooves and the lovely sound of the Baltimore Oriole flying from apple tree to apple tree, along with the other songbirds, and livestock to pasture, the sound of the creek, and ahhhh, the fragrance of the May apple tree...


The Valley in Spring.


The Baltimore Oriole's return and distinguished welcoming call was heard last weekend.
Every year in May, when the apple trees blossom, the welcome sound of the Oriole can be heard as it flies from apple tree to apple tree collecting bugs to eat.
In Thornton Burgess' "The Burgess Bird Book for Children", Peter Rabbit observed Goldy the Baltimore Oriole in the apple tree. Peter "never had seen any one more beautifully dressed and his song was as rich and beautiful as his coat."

Here is a link to the Corgyncombe Courant's post with Grandmum and Grandfather's children:

Here is a link to the Corgyncombe Courant's post about Grandmum's Grandmum.

In "Tasha Tudor, The Direction of Her Dreams" by Wm John Hare and Priscilla T. Hare, Tasha Tudor's daughter Bethany Tudor speaks of how Tasha Tudor was inspired by the movie "Friendly Persuasion" to illustrate the endpapers of "Around the Year". The endpapers of "Around the Year" show a couple riding in a horse and buggy, crossing a creek, with lovely countryside round with sheep and cows to pasture.

The movie "Friendly Persuasion" was about a Quaker family amidst the Civil War. The movie's introduction song is so lovely accompanying this post.

Here is a link to:
From there, click on "Books", where you can find "Around the Year", one of the Corgyncombe Library's favorite Tasha Tudor books!


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