Curran Homestead Roundtable

The Curran Homestead Living History Farm and Museum is a nonprofit educational institution. This blog is a forum for ideas and comment by everyone who contributes to The Curran Homestead's continued success. It is also a resource of ideas for development, marketing, fundraising,grant writing, rebranding strategies, and the like for the student, budding museum professional, and those who are simply interested. Click "0 COMMENTS" at the end of each blog entry and share your thoughts with us.

Friday, November 25, 2016

Timberframe Construction at The Curran Homestead III

Doug Dolan

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Timberframe Construction at The Curran Homestead II







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Timberframe Construction at The Curran Homestead





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Double silhouette portraits, by Ruth Monsell

Double silhouette portraits, by Ruth Monsell

Silhouette portrait, by Ruth Monsell

Silhouette portrait, by Ruth Monsell

This is a "recyclable [before such terms were bandied about]" exhaust system, a muffler, for a circa 1920s automobile ( this may have been used on a 1928 Chevrolet truck). On the right of the device is the tail pipe. Between the pieces at each end a piece of sheet metal would be formed in a cylinder shape and fastened together with rivets or other fasteners. The cast steel part in the middle of the rod would, I believe, serve as a baffle within the sheet metal cylinder construction. Such a device required the kind of labor our society now avoids in lieu of the disposable. From the Farm of Donald and Thelma Bowden, Goodale's Corner, Orrington, ME. cast steel, c.1928.


New Acquisition ( 2/27/2010): This device was created by Richard Bowden when he was in high school ( he lived on the Bowden Farm then at Goodale's Corner in Orrington, ME). The bottom appendages would be fitted onto a gear or pulley from a shaft. The center bolt at the top, which is missing, would be turned into the center of the round shaft, with the appendages grasping the back side of the pulley. "When the center bolt is tightened against the center of the shaft, it pulls the pulley or gear from the shaft," according to its maker. "Visualize a belt pulley on the front of an engine that drives the alternator, air conditioner compressor, power steering...etc....the pulley needs to be removed from the shaft in order to replace the oil seal that has developed a leak..." Such a hand-made device embodies Maine's propensity for solving problems with both ingenuity and the materials at hand. From the Farm of Donald and Thelma Bowden, Goodale's Corner, Orrington, ME.,steel, c.1956.


Some tools recently donated from the Clark family farm in Searsmont, ME.

This tool box is indicative of the value of fine tools in the 19th century. Given that most tools were handcrafted this gave them even more value than tools of today. This has handcrafted handles at both ends as well as a lock mechanism. There is a removable tray on the inside.

This is a close-up of the recently acquired "Hutchinson's" apple cider press that has a patent date on it of "1863." We will use this next year for our Halloween event as we develop further our apple harvesting programming.

This organ stool was recently donated along with many other treasures from the Clark family farm on Moody Mountain Road in Searsmont. It was stowed away in a equipment shed attic. This stool matches a piano chair given by Sallie Cartwright, great granddaughter of Manilla Lamb Clark.

Some gobblers at the farm on Fields Pond Rd. recently.

Our 2008 Halloween Event

Stan Richardson from Birdsacre at a recent presentation of owls at the Brewer Auditorium.

Stan Richardson from Birdsacre at a recent presentation of owls at the Brewer Auditorium.
Grayson, Stan's son, will be sharing some owls at our upcoming Halloween event; the presentation starts at 12PM in the big barn at the farm.

The Smithy

The Smithy

The Smithy, as of October 2.

The Smithy, as of October 2.


Volunteers building the smithy


our smithy in progress

The Conquests, Prior owners of Fields Pond Farm

The Conquests, Prior owners of Fields Pond Farm
The Conquests ( Edward (b.1891) and his father Arthur Joseph Conquest (circa 1925/6). In a recent interview with Connie Russell (nee Conquest), daughter to Edward, it was explained that her grandfather Arthur was an English immigrant. Edward, his son, had actually bought what would become The Curran Homestead prior to 1914 ( when the Currans purchased it) in his father's name. Edward had set his father up there to farm for a few years. A horse farm was also owned by the Conquests somewhere near where Cozy Corners is now located in Orrington. That was sold lock, stock, and barrel to a man a short time after the Conquests bought it. The new owner realized a month later that he couldn't afford it; he begged Edward Conquest to buy it back, but he refused to. Shortly thereafter the new owner, according to family legend, set the barn on fire with all the horses in it. This, according to Mrs. Russell, distressed her father for many years after as he was extremely fond of horses all his life. He wished in hindsight to have avoided the loss of those horses in the fire.

My brace bit came loose during the tapping; I tightened it undetected.

Mrs. Higgins' Pre-School class at the Eddington School.






From the Curran Homestead Collection: Ice Pike. I recently came across this after we had out first annual ice harvest on Fields Pond. This differs from the gaffing tool that we recently used with much success in lieu of a tool with this type of multiple head. Ice harvesters used such a tool for maneuvering ice block. It differs from some of the examples that I have previously seen. The wooden handles were much longer than this. It may have been the choice of the individual harvesters but such a short handle would serve the purpose of one of a variety of tasks related to drawing the ice block out of the water onto a conveyor for transport.

Ice pike from the Curran Homestead Collection.

My Blog List

  • Hometown Warwick, NY Blog
    New York Tribune, Monday, May 17, 1875: "A Chase for a Mastodon"
    9 years ago
  • Museum Talk
    A Series of Approaches To A Children's Museum, Part 1
    12 years ago
  • Brewer Historical Society Blog
    14 years ago
  • The Curran Homestead
    Author Wilbur Wolf Will Share His Memoir of a Farm Boy at The Curran Homestead Living History Farm and Museum on Thursday, May 28, 2009
    16 years ago
  • Art Throbs






Irv Marsters displays ice saw and tongs from our collection

At the right, Phillip Kiel, my great-grandfather, as an ice delivery man in Coney Island, Brooklyn, c.1907

Ice blocks ready for transport

Ice tongs

Ice axe, auger for drilling holes in the ice, and an assortment of tools for shaping blocks

Modern pike with gaff hook used in this ice harvesting re-enactment

Horse-drawn ice plow for scoring the ice in a grid pattern before cutting

Ice harvesting crew with tools

My Blog List

  • Hometown Warwick, NY Blog
    New York Tribune, Monday, May 17, 1875: "A Chase for a Mastodon"
    9 years ago
  • Museum Talk
    A Series of Approaches To A Children's Museum, Part 1
    12 years ago
  • The Curran Homestead
    Author Wilbur Wolf Will Share His Memoir of a Farm Boy at The Curran Homestead Living History Farm and Museum on Thursday, May 28, 2009
    16 years ago
  • Art Throbs
















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