Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Hip Hop Hamilton


Yes, you read correctly! This is a theatrical production in the hip-hop style of the history of Alexander Hamilton. Today's Conway Daily Sun features an article by David Brooks titled "The Hamilton Experience." You can pick up a free copy of the paper at many locations in the Mount Washington Valley or check it out online at The Conway Daily Sun. For back issues, you can view them at the Henney History Room of the Conway Public Library.


Enjoying winter doesn't mean you can't start thinking about summer!


Celia Thaxter in her garden, 1892 by Childe Hassam.
New Hampshire is featured well in a new exhibit at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. Follow this link for more info about the exhibit, catalog, and related programs. Take the train down and check this out! Then go to the Isles and visit her garden as well as other NH gardens later this spring and summer. The Conway Historical Society will be featuring artworks showing Benjamin Chapney's garden and the history of other area gardens. Go to the Henney History Room of the Conway Public Library to learn more, especially about the ideals of cottage gardens and Abnaki Rugs as explained by Helen Albee of Chocorua.

Enjoy winter! Bring history to life!


You gotta see this! This weekend will be the Chocorua sled dog race, the most scenic event of the year. For details on location, parking, food, etc. see Tamworth Outing Club sled dog event and New England Sled Dog Club. Volunteer Curtis Tinker at the Henney History Room of the Conway Public Library has been scanning a scrap book loaned to us by the Tamworth Historical Society that is full of information about sled dogs and this is a great time to see the connection between archives and living history. Besides, the chili is great to eat with new friends around the bonfire.

Monday, February 9, 2015

Bemis papers donated to the Conway Public Library



Samuel Bemis Collection Donated to Conway Public Library Conway, NH – February 3, 2015 – Ed Butler and Les Schoof, owners of The Notchland Inn, recently donated a large collection of archival materials to the Henney History Room of the Conway Public Library. The papers include thousands of pages that document the life, interests and activities of Dr. Samuel A. Bemis who lived from around 1793 to 1881. They have been wonderfully preserved over the years at the Notchland Inn, a grand stone mansion built by Dr Bemis in Crawford Notch. The Inn now serves visitors to the White Mountains as it has for many years. Dr. Samuel Bemis’s obituary reported “He was ninety years old, and very eccentric.” In her biographical article on him, Catherine Campbell refered to him as a “Renaissance Yankee.” He certainly was eclectic in his interests and taste as this unique collection of primary sources documents. He was America’s first photographer and produced the earliest known accurate sketch and photograph of the Old Man of the Mountain. His cameras and photographs can be found in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Getty Museum, George Eastman House and private collections. The newly donated papers include detailed records for three-hundred-fifty daguerreotype exposures. His day job was as a dentist in Boston but he also worked in several other trades and crafts as well as businesses. Early in his career he made clocks and watches. Some of his watch papers are in the collection of the American Antiquarian Society and some of his tools are in the Henry Ford Museum in Detroit. The papers include a wide variety of materials including letters, sketches, invoices, receipts and diaries. Subjects include dentistry, art collecting, inventions, fly fishing, fine dining, wine, literature, politics, finance and business, railroad construction, road construction (especially of the Tenth Mountain Turnpike - the road through Crawford Notch, tourism, ice house management techniques, timber theives, weather, genealogy, fruit farming, quarrying, bird study, Christmas gifts, etc. Henney History Room volunteers Lee Pollock and Rena Hoyt have spent hundreds of hours doing a rough initial inventory of the collection and have scanned some of the highlights. The Conway Public Library hopes to properly process the collection into acid free boxes and sleeves, catalog, microfilm, and digitize the entire collection to make it more easily accessible to the public. Thanks again to Ed Butler and Les Schoof, owners of The Notchland Inn, for this wonderful donation.


For more info contact: 15 Greenwood Avenue, Conway, NH 03818 | www.conwaypubliclibrary.org | 603-447-5552