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Night at the Museum – Tonight – Thursday, July 23   1 to 8 PM

Night at the Museum – Tonight – Thursday, July 23 1 to 8 PM

Your days may be busCider Social 2012 (17)y, but summer nights are meant for fun.  Tonight bring the whole family to the Wilbor House Museum for a twilight tour of the house and a visit to the special exhibition “The Stories Houses Tell.”

Weave using our giant Friendly Loom and deconstruct and build a 17th century post and beam house. Peggotty is open for visits. Our wooden toys will be out on the lawn and there will be cornbread samples while they last.

Members, as always are free, and non-members are $7.50 for adults and $5 for children.

Anonymous Donor Offers $10,000 Challenge Grant to Complete Saving Peggotty Project

Anonymous Donor Offers $10,000 Challenge Grant to Complete Saving Peggotty Project

DSC03515A Little Compton man who wishes to remain anonymous has generously offered a $10,000 challenge grant to help complete our Saving Peggotty Project. The donor will match one to one any gift given to support the Historical Society’s stabilization and restoration of Peggotty that arrives between June 1 and Columbus Day up to a total of $10,000.

Gifts of any amount are greatly appreciated. Gifts of $1,000 or more will be recognized on a plaque in Peggotty’s new display building. As of press time LCHS had raised $3,700 toward the challenge. Donations may be made via mail (P.O. Box 577), phone (401-635-4035) or on-line at littlecompton.org.

Look for the DONATE NOW button on our homepage.

The $20,000 we hope to raise as a result of this challenge will be used to pay for the Category 5 Hurricane Screens that now protect Peggotty during foul weather and the final steps in Master Shipwright Hermann Hinrichsen’s efforts to repair and strengthen Peggotty’s hull.

Peggotty is Sydney Burleigh’s 109-year-old artist studio. The studio is built on the oldest known catboat in existence and is topped by a thatched roof.  In 2014 the Historical Society began a $90,000 campaign to replace Peggotty’s failing boat cradle, build a new display building, and strengthen and restore the studio to ensure that Peggotty will be enjoyed by many generations to come.

Save the Dates!

Save the Dates!

Seabury Clambake 1890 BFW Scrapbook 001

Join us at our 2015 Special Events!

Exhibit Preview Party            Friday, July 3, 2015                             6-8 PM

Family Day Celebration         Saturday, July 4, 2015                        12-4 PM

Annual Meeting                     Wednesday, August 12, 2015             7 PM

Historic House Tour              Sunday, September 20, 2015               Noon to 5 PM

Patron’s Brunch                    Sunday, September 20, 2015               10 AM to Noon

Members will receive their invitations in early June.

Not yet a member? Call (or message us) for an invitation.

401-635-4035

LCHS to Present at Catboat Association Meeting

LCHS to Present at Catboat Association Meeting

The CatboatDSC03497 Association has invited LCHS President Dora Atwater Millikin and Director Marjory O’Toole to share the history of Peggotty at the Association’s 53rd Annual Meeting in Mystic, Connecticut this weekend, March 6-8, 2015.

The Catboat Association calls Peggotty “the oldest catboat in captivity” dating it to approximately 1850. Marjory will discuss its original use as a fishing boat and ferry boat in the Sakonnet River, itsDSC03515 transformation into Sydney Burleigh’s artist studio in 1906, its journey to the Historical Society in 1962, and the conservation and preservation efforts the Historical Society has undertaken since then.

Most recently LCHS has committed to a $90,000 preservation and conservation project to provide Peggotty with a more supportive boat cradle, a beautiful new display building, and a new more prominent location on the Historical Society grounds.

This summer PegIMG_0258 (1)gotty moved into its new building using a system of planks and rollers that would have made the ancient Egyptians proud. This winter it is tucked safely behind its brand new Category 5 Hurricane Screens.

The screens will come down as soon as the winter snows finally melt away, and Master Shipwright Hermann Hinrichsen will continue his careful restoration of Peggotty’s hull.

We are now just $27,000 away from our fundraising goal and welcome gifts of all sizes to help SAVE PEGGOTTY.

Holiday Open House Today

Holiday Open House Today

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Join us at the Wilbor House Museum from 1 to 7 PM to celebrate the season with special activities, members discounts in our expanded museum shop and eight local vendors offering one-of-a-kind Little Compton gifts.

1 PM Archival Tour – Free and open to the public

1 PM Pre-school Please Touch Touch Tour for little ones and their parents.  Free to members.  $5 for non-member families

5 PM & 6 PM Lantern Tours of the Wilbor House Museum  Free to Members $5 for nonmmbers

3 to 5 PM Jingle Bell Carriage Rides $5 per person

Local Vendors 1 to 7 PM

Painted furniture. antique French Linens, Local Farm photo book, homemade Jams, local honey, children’s accessories, specialty soaps and more!

Peggotty’s Almost Home

Peggotty’s Almost Home

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A Big Move

On September 5th  Peggotty completed a historic voyage. Though the distance traveled was less than 100 feet, the trip took two days and was not without some risk.  Peggotty, supported by a brand-new, custom fit boat cradle, was rolled inch by inch from its old display area into a new building designed to protect the studio throughout its second century.

Peggotty’s Importance

Peggotty is Sydney Burleigh’s boat-bottomed, thatched-roofed artist’s studio. It is one of the most interesting objects owned by the Little Compton Historical Society and may in fact be unique in all the world.  Little Compton artist Sydney Burleigh built Peggotty in 1906 using an abandoned catboat as its base.  The catboat once ferried people and produce between Taylor’s Lane and Aquidneck Island. The Catboat Association believes Peggotty may be the oldest catboat still in existence.

The Need for Preservation

LCHS celebrated Peggotty’s 100th birthday in 2006 and has kept a watchful eye on its condition ever since Hurricane Sandy damaged Peggotty’s old display building in 2012, and by the winter of 2014 the studio’s 50-year-old boat cradle was visibly failing.

The Board of Directors voted to take action this summer. It hireMaster Shipwright Herman Hinrichsen to replace Peggotty’s cradle and create a system of supports to bear the heavy weight of the studio’s thatched roof. Without this new cradle and the additional supports a structural collapse was inevitable.

The Board also hired Michael Kinnane Construction to design and build a new display building for Peggotty.  The building is located in a much more visible location on the Historical Society grounds and will help ensure that visitors actually see and  enjoy Peggotty in the future.  The new, larger building will help preserve the studio by providing the recommended amount of air circulation around the structure and will also enable visitors to see Peggotty from all slides.

The Saving Peggotty campaign is turning out to cost very close to the $90,000 estimated at the beginning of the project. Normally, the Historical Society raises all of the funds necessary for a project before work begins.  However, in this case the need for a new cradle was so great and the threat of collapse was so real, the Board decided to begin construction and fundraising at the same time.

To date over 200 supporters have donated approximately $55,000 to help save Peggotty. It is our hope that additional gifts will arrive in the coming weeks to help fill the gap between what has been raised and our $90,000 goal. The Carlton Brownell Collections Fund will also be used to support the project. Anyone wishing to contribute is encouraged to use the form below.  Gifts of any amount are greatly appreciated.

Work continues on Peggotty to add additional internal supports to ensure the studio’s safety and stability for the next 100 years. A final step in the project will the installation of removable hurricane screens that will provide protection during bad weather and are rated for Category 5 Hurricanes.

The public is invited to visit Peggotty during our Cider Social celebration from 1 to 4 PM on Monday, October 13.

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2014 ANNUAL MEETING

2014 ANNUAL MEETING

Little Compton Historical Society

Annual Meeting

Wednesday,  August 13, 2014

7:00 PM      Business Meeting

7:15 PM      Annual Speaker

Little Compton Community Center

 

2014_March29

 

Featured Speaker

Jennifer Weston

Our Mother Tongues:

Reviving the Wampanog Language

 

Jennifer Weston, Founding Trustee of the Wôpanâak Language Immersion Charter School and the Interim Director of the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribal Language Department will discuss current efforts to revive the Wampanoag language. Ms. Weston’s talk will touch on the ways English education in the Colonial Period led to the loss of the language and the ways that Wampanoag people in Rhode Island and Massachusetts are working to bring it back. Weston will show excerpts from the award-winning 2011 documentary WE STILL LIVE HERE: Âs Nutayuneân, which explores the reawakening of the Wampanoag language after many generations without fluent speakers, a film that she helped research and co-produced. A question and answer period will follow.

Please Note: This year the Annual Meeting will be held at the Little Compton Community Center.

Free and Open to the Public

Refreshments will be served.

To learn more, visit these websites:

www.wlrp.org

http://www.pbs.org/independentlens/we-still-live-here/

http://www.mashpeewampanoagtribe.com/human_services

 

 

 

Learning in Little Compton — Special Exhibit 2014

Learning in Little Compton — Special Exhibit 2014

JFWilburSchoolJune 27 – October 13

From the reading, writing and ciphering of colonial students to courses in chemistry and French at Wilbur High School, there has been a whole lot of learning going on in Little Compton.

This summer the Historical Society celebrates “Learning in Little Compton” with a special exhibition and series of public programs scheduled throughout the season. We are especially pleased to be partnering with the Wilbur School Reunion Committee to present three special events on Opening Weekend, June 27-29. Former Little Compton students from all over the
country are expected to return to Little Compton to join in the celebration.

 

Welcome to our newly redesigned website

Welcome to our newly redesigned website

In an effort to bring you information in a more timely way, we have redesigned our website and hope that you will check back with us regularly for updates.

Click the +Follow tab at the bottom of the page to receive updates from us whenever we update the site with new information.

And as always, you can always call us at 401-635-4035 or email us at lchistory@littlecompton.org with any questions.

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548 West Main Road, Little Compton, Rhode Island
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