Sunday, January 18, 2015

Frontier Culture Museum - Staunton, Virginia 2008

This is a post delayed 5 years in the writing.

We are living history fans, so when we were near the Frontier Culture Museum we decided we must stop to see what they were doing...rather a busman's holiday.  It seems like most living history museums choose a period or area to portray.  The Frontier Culture Museum shows farm life in the Shenandoah Valley in the frontier time period. The premise of the museum is that the valley is a place where much of American culture was born.  It was settled by farmers from England, Ireland (Scots-Irish) and Germany.  They started with a short film narrated by David McCulloch, a well-known  historical writer.  He showed the reasons people left these areas to settle in Virginia and how their farming ways influenced how Americans eventually farmed.

At the time we visited, German, English and Irish farms were portrayed with exhibits on African-American and Native American farming practices under construction but not yet open.  In order to  be accurate they went to England, Germany and Ireland to find period appropriate farmhouses from the 1600-1700s which could be purchased.  Once suitable houses were found, they were numbered and dismantled so they could be reassembled on the site of the museum.

The weekend we visited, they were showing cloth production.

We first visited the English farm where they were washing wool to prepare it for spinning. The house was a half-timbered sort of building also called a daub and wattle building. As one acquaintance would have said, "It's so pastoral!"






This picture, taken from the inside shows what the walls look like between the timbers before it is plastered or covered with clay.  Branches are woven between pieces of wood to fill in the space.   This is the daub and wattle.


The kitchen featured a large, open fireplace for cooking and heating.


Bed curtains were used both for warmth and for privacy.


Our guide offered a pretend dinner party in the dining room, using the plates, etc there.

Next we visited the Irish farm with its rock walls.


This is where they were preparing flax for spinning.  The portion of the flax that is used is a fiber inside a woody stem, so this lady is using a flax brake to crush and break up the woody parts to gain access to the fibers inside.  The usable flax looks like blond hair when properly prepared.  A hunk of prepared flax is called a 'tow'.  This is where we get the term tow head for a blond haired child.  Sometimes such a hair color is also called 'flaxen haired'.




The next site we visited was the German farm where they were spinning the flax.  When flax is spun, the fabric is called linen.  It was common on the frontier to make a sturdy fabric called linsey-woolsey which was a combination of linen and wool.


The kitchen had a raised hearth which seemed much less back breaking to me.


After the spinning was done, weaving was done in a sunny room.





The German farm interpreter had on a laced bodice over a chemise.  One of the men in the group kept nattering about it...wondering about it.  She nicely and tactfully told him several times that is was sort of like an under garment but was worn over the chemise and had boning in it.  The man just would not quit with the questions until finally his wife poked  him and said, "It's like a bra!"  Then he shut up.

The last stop was the America farm which combined features and practices from all the other sites which were found to work best on that part of the American frontier.


It was an enjoyable trip and we learned a lot.

Tuesday, January 6, 2015

When the Wind Blows

When we left on December 19th for our planned Christmas vacation in Colorado, we commented on the lovely driving weather.  Our trip across Wyoming was pleasant and uneventful.

After visiting with family over Christmas we decided to head back home on January 5th.  Although snow had fallen during our stay in Colorado, the forecast for the 5th seemed like it would be a good weather day to travel.  Thus, we set off, bright and early, stopping for breakfast in nearby Loveland.  After breakfast, we headed north towards Cheyenne, still enjoying our drive.

After turning west at Cheyenne, the weather started to change.  Although it was not actively snowing, blowing snow made the visibility very poor.  We couldn't even see the side of the road, so we focused on the flashing tail lights of the truck in front of us to make our way.  The gusts of wind grew increasingly vicious.  Soon we began to see semis parking along the side of the road.  In spite of the weather and slowed traffic, some drivers drove on as if the road were in perfect condition.  One that I recall was a pickup truck pulling a long horse trailer.  A couple of semis had been caught by the wind and turned over.  The emergency traffic broadcast on the radio gave warnings especially to vehicles with light, high loads.  I noticed a few on ramps were blocked so the freeway couldn't be entered from these points.

Our plan was to drive as far as Laramie and then fill up with gas so we could make it the rest of the way across Wyoming.  When we got to exit 310 at Laramie we headed off the freeway to get our gas, noticing at the same time that the gates had been closed on the west side of Laramie.  The road in front of us was closed...and so was the road behind us.  While we were filling up with gas, Roger talked with some eastbound truckers who said road conditions to the west were terrible.  They were sure the road would be closed all day and maybe more.  That is when we noticed that the sides of the road were filled with parked semis.  The 2 truck stops there were filled with semis.  Every vacant lot was filled with parked semis.  I have never in my life seen so many semis parked in one place.

They are difficult to see in the picture but they are lined up on the side of the road from the on ramp for maybe half a mile.  They are visible behind the Super 8 sign.

We debated what to do and then decided to check into the Best Western motel that was right there rather than sit in the car all day waiting for the road to open.  Then we found a local grocery store and found food for lunch and dinner.   After a refreshing nap, we headed to the local movie theater to watch the newest Hobbit  movie.

By the time we woke up the next morning, the freeway was open and traffic was moving again, so we ate breakfast and finished our journey home.  We noticed a total of 13 vehicles which had blown over and off the road.  Eleven of them were semis which had turned over or jack-knifed or both.  One was a 5th wheeler...and one was the horse trailer we saw speeding by the previous day, destroying both the trailer and the truck.