Remembering
Jim Ballantine
It is with
sadness that we report the passing of Jim Ballantine on August 2. A
long-standing member of the Cavendish Select board, the Cavendish Town Elementary School Board and the Cavendish
Municipal Water System Board, Jim was the chair of the Select board for the
last several years. In prior years, he was very active with the Cavendish Fire
Department.
Whether it was
looking for a cannon on Hawks Mountain, or some other piece of Cavendish
history, one of Jim’s big concerns was that we had Atherton Bemiss’s history of
the town, some of which had been written by his ancestors. When we assured him that we had a copy
in the Cavendish Historical Society (CHS) archives, and offered to make copies
of some of it, he declined saying “just as long as it’s there.”
He thought it
was important to video tape our older residents. “It’s not just their stories,”
he’d say, “it was how they sound when they told those stories. You can’t get
anyone to sound like Sophie.” Fortunately for generations to come, there is
considerable footage of Jim at various town meetings, which have all been taped
by LPC TV.
CHS
extends its sympathies to his wife Elsie, his c children and grandchildren.
Annual
Meeting
The
CHS Annual Meeting has been scheduled for February 24, 5 pm. More information
will be available in the Winter newsletter.
Linda’s
Social History Corner
Linda Welch is
the genealogist for the Cavendish Histor ical Society and the author of the series “Families of
Cavendish.” To contact her, please e-mail lindamfw@charter.net
As many of us know, Don Carlos Pollard's store was not just a
store. It was an operation. Located right near the railroad tracks and depot,
the store was a stockhouse of just about everything families in a Vermont farm
community would need to get along. And if Pollard didn't have it, he could get
it (he had all kinds of catalogs in the store, and was agent for many
companies). This advertisement of 1870 (the earliest one I could find) shows Pollard's
was a dry goods, clothing, cloth, hats, caps, and ready made ware for boys,
store. It sold boots, shoes, groceries including teas, coffee, etc., hardware,
all the tools for the farm. In addition it was a drugstore and pharmacy and
carried all kinds of dishes and house wares, glasses and pots and pans. It was
an ole' New England style "WALMART" in its time. This store was
in business even after the Second World War. My great grandfather's and great
grandmother's shopped there. My grandfather and grandmother shopped there; my
father shopped there. He was raised in Proctorsville (born 1909). The people who
lived all around this store knew its value and history. Everyone has there own
personal memories of that great 'ole place, Pollard's Store. Do not forget,
that it was while working in this store as a young lad, that Calvin Coolidge
began interested in politics. Many of you have your own memories of Pollard's.
I would love to hear from you. —Linda M. Welch (lindamfw@charter.net)
Cavendish
Civil War History: Henry B. Atherton
Attending the Duttonsville School, where he excelled,
Henry Bridge Atherton was more interested in poetry than farming. During his
time at Dartmouth College, he taught the winter school in Duttonsville twice
and one winter in Proctorsville. From there he went to the Albany Law School
where her received the degree of L.L.B. in 1860.
With
an office in Proctorsville, John Brown, the famous abolitionist, and his son
Owen came to visit Atherton in late 1856 or early 1857. The purpose of that
visit, Atherton describes in a letter to the biographer of Brown, John Redpath, in 1882, was to
seek guns and money to help with his anti slavery cause.
When
the Civil War began, Atherton offered his services to Governor Fairbanks, who
on August 12, 1861, commissioned him to raise a company of three-year men for
the Union. Within two weeks he had secured his hundred men and twenty to spare.
It was the color Company of the 4th Vermont known as the “Lion Brigade.”
Atherton was chosen captain and was mustered into service at Brattleboro in
Company “C.” He wrote a great many letters during the war, some of which are
available at the on-line Atherton Collection, compiled
by Linda Welch.
It
is interesting that in 1853, at the age of 16, he wrote a poem, “The Widow,”
which would take on a very sad and tragic meaning ten years later, when so many
Cavendish wives lost their husband in the war.
The
Widow
The
widow is a dangerous thing.
With
soft, black shinning curls,
And
looketh more bewitching
Than
an host of romping girls;
Her
laugh is so delicious-
So,
knowing, clear, beside.
You’d
never dream she’s thinking
Soon
to become a bride.
Her
dress, though made of sables,
Gives
roundness to her form-
A
touch of something thoughtful,
A
witching, winning charm.
And
when she sits down by you,
With
quiet, easy grace-
A
tear may fall unbidden,
Or
a smile light up her face.
Her
voice is soft melodious-
And
lute-like in its tone.
She
sometimes sighs: “it’s dreadful
To
pass through life alone.”
And
she’d tell you, you remind her
Of
the loved one dead and gone.
Your
step, your form, your features;
Thus
the widow will run on.
Oh!
Listen, yet be careful,
For
well she plays her part-
Her
lips distill the nectar
That
doth enslave the heart.
Be
barded or she’ll win you,
With
smiles, and sighs, and tears;
I’l
saith she’ll wear the breeches, too,
And
box your silly ears!
Severely
wounded by a bullet in the groin, he resigned his commission, which was taken
over by another Cavendish solder, George Blood French. Atheron accepted the
editorial management of the New Hampshire Telegraph, in Nashua, NH. Returning
to law practice, Atherton served in the legislature and was even offered the
governorship of Alaska by President Harrison. He continued to write, including
an article “The Old Indian Road,” covering the history of Vermont and the Crown
Point Military Road and the captivity of Mrs. Johns, mother of the first white
child born in Vermont.
Atherton died of pneumonia at the age of 71. “He was fulfilling
a speaking engagement at the Tremont Temple in Boston, and stepped onto an
outside balcony for a breath of fresh air. He suffered a chill, and within ten
days he was dead.”
Phineas
Gage was the first documented traumatic brain injury case, as the result of a
tamping rod passing through his head, while
working in Cavendish, blasting rock for the new railroad in 1848. While Dr. Harlow is credited with
saving Gage’s life after the accident, it took another doctor, Gene Bont, who
was the area’s family doctor for approximately 30 years, to find documentation
that Gage made his living at times by posing as a curiosity. Bont found a
poster advertising Gage as “The World’s Wonder.” For 12 1•2 Cents, “to be had
at the door,” you could see Phineas Gage at Rumford Hall where he will exhibit
to them, in his own person, one of the greatest wonders of the world! Nothing
less than a man who has had a huge iron bar, which he will exhibit, forced
through his head from chin to crown; has had, in fact his brains blown out!”
Copies
of the Gage poster, 81/2 X 11,” are now being sold by CHS for $5 a piece, plus
$3 for shipping and handling. Money raised from the sale of the posters will go
towards a Phineas Gage website, which will be done by the Cavendish Town
Elementary School’s 4th grade class under the direction of their teacher Jenn
Harper.
You can purchase a poster by sending a check to the CHS, PO Box
472, Cavendish, VT 05142.
Photographs Needed for Cavendish Facebook Page
Many
people are enjoying the old photographs CHS has been posting to the Cavendish VT Facebook page. If you
have old photographs of Cavendish or Proctorsville that you would like to
share, please e-mail them in Jpg format to margoc@tds.net Be sure to include a
brief description.
Special Thanks to Volunteers
A very special thank you to Doug Haskell
and Stewart Lindberg for keeping the lawns mowed and looking good this summer
at the Museum and the Old Stone Church. Our Hands on History Program wouldn’t
be possible without our amazing volunteers: Pam Bruno, Gloria Leven, Sandra
Stearns, Pang Ting and Gail Woods. Jared Harper has done a wonderful job of
reproducing our 1927 flood photograph and enlarging the Phineas Gage poster.
Hands
on History Program
Since people learn best by doing, CHS has come
up with a variety of workshops that are available to local schools, community
groups and at special CHS events. Thanks to a grant from the Cavendish
Community Fund (CCF), a project of the Cavendish Community and Conservation
Association (CCCA), CHS has already offered three Hands on History programs.
Back to School with the Cavendish Historical Society: Make a Chalkboard was offered in August and was then repeated as a special project with the third grade students at the Cavendish Town Elementary School, who were studying what it was like to attend a one-room schoolhouse.
George Baron, an
instructor at West Point Military Academy, is thought to be the first American
instructor to use a large black slate chalkboard, when teaching math, in 1801.
By the mid-1800s, a blackboard was to be found in almost every school and had
become the single most important educational tool.
Chalkboards
remained the primary all-around educational fixture in schoolrooms and
businesses for almost 200 years.
Many rural
schools used the slate material chalkboard, a labor saving device for teachers
and allowing them to educate many more children at one time. However, CHS found
that not all of Cavendish’s rural schools adopted the slate chalkboard.
The Rumke School
(Greenbush Rd in Cavendish) was closed in 1923. Left untouched, the property
owners, Al and Diana Leonard, donated the teacher’s blackboard, to the Museum.
This one room schoolhouse was still using a blackboard made by the old method of combining un sanded
grout and paint. Given the combination of Yankee thrift and lack of funds, many
of the Cavendish rural one-room schoolhouses most likely used similar methods.
In
addition to making their own personal chalkboards, which they then used as part
of their lessons each day for the next few weeks, the Cavendish third graders
had the pleasure of learning about life in a one room school house from Cavendish’s
own “Laura Ingalls Wilder,” Sandra Stearns. In her book Cavendish Hillside
Farm 1939 to 1957,
Stearns recalls what it was like to attend the Center Road School, a one room
schoolhouse at the juncture of Town Farm and Center Roads. The students had a
chance to play the schoolyard games of sixty years ago.
On October 22,
CHS held a town wide Early Settler’s workshop featuring quilting, candle making with beeswax
obtained from local hives, stenciling and cider pressing.
Cavendish Historical Society Board
Dan Churchill
Jen Harper
Gloria Leven
Marc Miele
Bruce McEnaney
Joseph Pasquerello
Mike Pember
Gail Woods
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