Historic sketch of a building being moved. Note they used at least six yoke (pairs) of oxen. Charles-Alexandre Lesueur (1778-1846). Le Havre (France), Muséum d’histoire naturelle. Starting at 9 am on Tuesday, July 29, 2025 (weather permitting) you will be able to see a similar scene when the Jackson Historical Society moves its Museum building (the old Jackson Town Hall) about 150 feet to a new location, albeit with modern equipment instead of oxen. The building is all jacked up and ready to roll! Be sure to put this on your calendar! Bring a lawn chair and watch the fun from a safe distance across the street The Conway Public Library's Henney History Room Curator, Bob Cottrell, (and part-time curator at the Jackson Historical Society) will present the library's newest hands-on outreach program about "simple machines" to help explain and interpret the mechanics of the moving operation and to compare tools and techniques of the past and the present. This new...
The Conway Public Library has reunited four paintings of local covered bridges for the first time in ten years. Each of the paintings depicts a local historic bridge during a different season: Spring, Summer, Autumn and Winter. For a driving tour to visit the site of each of the four bridges follow this link here . Three of the paintings are on loan courtesy of Sut and Margaret Marshall and one is on loan from Kennett High School. The Summer painting was presented to Kennett High School on July 25, 2015 from the Kennett High School Alumni Association, Class of 1965, as part of their 50th reunion. The bridges were painted by Conway artist Ernest O. Brown in 1970-71 for the now closed White Mountain National Bank in North Conway. They were originally displayed on the walls of the branch bank in Conway and later at the main office in North Conway. After the bank changed owners the four paintings were lost until 2015 when Charles Kilgore of Nashua NH acqui...
While we don't know the identity of the artist, the cover painting on Cornelius Weygandt's 1941 book, November Rowen , captures many key elements of this time of the year quite well. It depicts a traveler emerging from a horse-drawn sleigh greeting friends and/or family in a landscape covered with snow. One of the book's themes is the importance of maintaining family and community connections. The long hard work of harvesting crops is over and there is more free time for visiting. "The horse knows the way to carry the sleigh through the white and drifted snow" The theme of traveling to visit is central to the song "Over the river and through the wood" published in 1844 and written by Lydia Maria Child. The book's title "November Rowen" comes from a saying one of Weygandt's neighbors in Sandwich NH would repeat as if it were the refrain of a song: "There be no hay so sweet as November Rowen." Rowen is defined as a second h...
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