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October 28, 1933
Miss Elizabeth Sadtler
38 Marlborough Street
Boston, Mass.
Lizzie,
I just came home from a lecture at the old Beebe
mansion. Mr. Bristol has turned it into a spa
of sorts and now it’s the Falmouth Institute.
He believes people should only pay what
conscience dictates. Mrs. Helen Randle,
a nutrition “expert,” charges a pretty penny
for the same advice Mom gave for free—
You Are What You Eat!
My conscience told me Mrs. R.’s a con artist.
I wish I was there, not here,
Maisie
Alice Kociemba
�
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past
Subject
The topic of the resource
Falmouth
Creative writing
Photography
Historical postcards
Description
An account of the resource
<em>Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past</em> is a collection of community-sourced writing and art, created in response to Falmouth Public Library's historic postcard collection. It was run and curated by Calliope Poetry for Community in 2023. Postcard reproductions and their associated derivative works were originally displayed at the Falmouth Historical Society's Museums on the Green from October 6th, 2023 – May 10th, 2024.<br /><br /><a href="https://falmouthpubliclibrary.omeka.net/exhibits/show/wish-you-were-here"><strong>Visit the Wish You Were Here digital exhibit to see these items on display.</strong></a>
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Calliope Poetry for Community
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2023
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Kathy Andrews, Julie Bogosian, Mary Boylan, Kathleen Casey, Mark Chester, Nancy Cherico, Meg Costello, Lisa Willow Dunn, Sally Fine , Diane Hanna, Ilene Karnow, Micheal Klehm , Alice Kociemba, Leslie Lichtenstein, Jim McIlvain, Miriam O’Neal, Marie Palmer, Scott Peterson, Laura Puopolo, Hilton Railey, Claudine Reilly, Paul Rifkin, Marilyn Rowland, Lisa Jo Rudy, Robin Smith-Johnson, Milt Williamson, Rich Youmans, Catherine Miron Youngstrom, Ron Zweig
Relation
A related resource
Anita Gunning Postcard Collection
Robert C. Hunt, Jr. Postcard Collection
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
jpg
pdf
png
docx
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Creative writing
Photography
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Text
Any textual data included in the document
October 28, 1933
Miss Elizabeth Sadtler
38 Marlborough Street
Boston, Mass.
Lizzie,
I just came home from a lecture at the old Beebe
mansion. Mr. Bristol has turned it into a spa
of sorts and now it’s the Falmouth Institute.
He believes people should only pay what
conscience dictates. Mrs. Helen Randle,
a nutrition “expert,” charges a pretty penny
for the same advice Mom gave for free—
You Are What You Eat!
My conscience told me Mrs. R.’s a con artist.
I wish I was there, not here,
Maisie
Alice Kociemba
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Highfield Poem 2 Alice Kociemba
Description
An account of the resource
Writing by Alice Kociemba, inspired by a historic postcard.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Alice Kociemba
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2023
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
docx
pdf
png
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Creative writing
Alice Kociemba
Highfield Hall
poetry
Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past
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PDF Text
Text
August 12, 1913
Miss Jenny Simmons
33 Beacon Street
Boston, Mass.
Sis,
You are the only one I can con�ide in. You were
with her at the luncheon before it happened.
You know the talk around town.
Arthur and Emily had the despondent Appleton genes
from their mother. Poor Mr. Beebe blames himself
for having guns in the house. Especially after Arthur.
Well, I dropped off a condolence note at the mansion and
took a walk to a kettle pond, what they call the Punch Bowl.
After looking out over the water, I turned and
saw it: a blood-red �ilm coating every bush and bramble.
That’s when I knew they’ll have no peace as long as High�ield stands.
I’ll arrive tomorrow on the 4:00 train with Maisie.
Lovingly,
Alice
Alice Kociemba
�
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past
Subject
The topic of the resource
Falmouth
Creative writing
Photography
Historical postcards
Description
An account of the resource
<em>Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past</em> is a collection of community-sourced writing and art, created in response to Falmouth Public Library's historic postcard collection. It was run and curated by Calliope Poetry for Community in 2023. Postcard reproductions and their associated derivative works were originally displayed at the Falmouth Historical Society's Museums on the Green from October 6th, 2023 – May 10th, 2024.<br /><br /><a href="https://falmouthpubliclibrary.omeka.net/exhibits/show/wish-you-were-here"><strong>Visit the Wish You Were Here digital exhibit to see these items on display.</strong></a>
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Calliope Poetry for Community
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2023
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Kathy Andrews, Julie Bogosian, Mary Boylan, Kathleen Casey, Mark Chester, Nancy Cherico, Meg Costello, Lisa Willow Dunn, Sally Fine , Diane Hanna, Ilene Karnow, Micheal Klehm , Alice Kociemba, Leslie Lichtenstein, Jim McIlvain, Miriam O’Neal, Marie Palmer, Scott Peterson, Laura Puopolo, Hilton Railey, Claudine Reilly, Paul Rifkin, Marilyn Rowland, Lisa Jo Rudy, Robin Smith-Johnson, Milt Williamson, Rich Youmans, Catherine Miron Youngstrom, Ron Zweig
Relation
A related resource
Anita Gunning Postcard Collection
Robert C. Hunt, Jr. Postcard Collection
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
jpg
pdf
png
docx
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Creative writing
Photography
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Text
Any textual data included in the document
August 12, 1913
Miss Jenny Simmons
33 Beacon Street
Boston, Mass.
Sis,
You are the only one I can confide in. You were
with her at the luncheon before it happened.
You know the talk around town.
Arthur and Emily had the despondent Appleton genes
from their mother. Poor Mr. Beebe blames himself
for having guns in the house. Especially after Arthur.
Well, I dropped off a condolence note at the mansion and
took a walk to a kettle pond, what they call the Punch Bowl.
After looking out over the water, I turned and
saw it: a blood-red film coating every bush and bramble.
That’s when I knew they’ll have no peace as long as Highfield stands.
I’ll arrive tomorrow on the 4:00 train with Maisie.
Lovingly,
Alice
Alice Kociemba
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Highfield Poem 1 Alice Kociemba
Description
An account of the resource
Writing by Alice Kociemba, inspired by a historic postcard.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Alice Kociemba
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2023
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
docx
pdf
png
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Creative writing
Alice Kociemba
Highfield Hall
poetry
Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past
Subject
The topic of the resource
Falmouth
Creative writing
Photography
Historical postcards
Description
An account of the resource
<em>Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past</em> is a collection of community-sourced writing and art, created in response to Falmouth Public Library's historic postcard collection. It was run and curated by Calliope Poetry for Community in 2023. Postcard reproductions and their associated derivative works were originally displayed at the Falmouth Historical Society's Museums on the Green from October 6th, 2023 – May 10th, 2024.<br /><br /><a href="https://falmouthpubliclibrary.omeka.net/exhibits/show/wish-you-were-here"><strong>Visit the Wish You Were Here digital exhibit to see these items on display.</strong></a>
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Calliope Poetry for Community
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2023
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Kathy Andrews, Julie Bogosian, Mary Boylan, Kathleen Casey, Mark Chester, Nancy Cherico, Meg Costello, Lisa Willow Dunn, Sally Fine , Diane Hanna, Ilene Karnow, Micheal Klehm , Alice Kociemba, Leslie Lichtenstein, Jim McIlvain, Miriam O’Neal, Marie Palmer, Scott Peterson, Laura Puopolo, Hilton Railey, Claudine Reilly, Paul Rifkin, Marilyn Rowland, Lisa Jo Rudy, Robin Smith-Johnson, Milt Williamson, Rich Youmans, Catherine Miron Youngstrom, Ron Zweig
Relation
A related resource
Anita Gunning Postcard Collection
Robert C. Hunt, Jr. Postcard Collection
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
jpg
pdf
png
docx
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Creative writing
Photography
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples include paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type Text to images of textual materials.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
Digital photograph
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Highfield Paul Rifkin
Subject
The topic of the resource
Buildings
Private buildings
Description
An account of the resource
Color photograph of Highfield Hall, Falmouth, Mass.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Paul Rifkin
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2023
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
jpeg
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Photograph
Highfield Hall
Paul Rifkin
photograph
Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past
Subject
The topic of the resource
Falmouth
Creative writing
Photography
Historical postcards
Description
An account of the resource
<em>Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past</em> is a collection of community-sourced writing and art, created in response to Falmouth Public Library's historic postcard collection. It was run and curated by Calliope Poetry for Community in 2023. Postcard reproductions and their associated derivative works were originally displayed at the Falmouth Historical Society's Museums on the Green from October 6th, 2023 – May 10th, 2024.<br /><br /><a href="https://falmouthpubliclibrary.omeka.net/exhibits/show/wish-you-were-here"><strong>Visit the Wish You Were Here digital exhibit to see these items on display.</strong></a>
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Calliope Poetry for Community
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2023
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Kathy Andrews, Julie Bogosian, Mary Boylan, Kathleen Casey, Mark Chester, Nancy Cherico, Meg Costello, Lisa Willow Dunn, Sally Fine , Diane Hanna, Ilene Karnow, Micheal Klehm , Alice Kociemba, Leslie Lichtenstein, Jim McIlvain, Miriam O’Neal, Marie Palmer, Scott Peterson, Laura Puopolo, Hilton Railey, Claudine Reilly, Paul Rifkin, Marilyn Rowland, Lisa Jo Rudy, Robin Smith-Johnson, Milt Williamson, Rich Youmans, Catherine Miron Youngstrom, Ron Zweig
Relation
A related resource
Anita Gunning Postcard Collection
Robert C. Hunt, Jr. Postcard Collection
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
jpg
pdf
png
docx
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Creative writing
Photography
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples include paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type Text to images of textual materials.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
Digital photograph
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Highfield Claudine Reilly
Subject
The topic of the resource
Buildings
Private buildings
Description
An account of the resource
Color photograph of Highfield Hall, Falmouth, Mass.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Claudine Reilly
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2023
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
jpeg
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Photograph
Claudine Reilly
Highfield Hall
photograph
Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past
Subject
The topic of the resource
Falmouth
Creative writing
Photography
Historical postcards
Description
An account of the resource
<em>Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past</em> is a collection of community-sourced writing and art, created in response to Falmouth Public Library's historic postcard collection. It was run and curated by Calliope Poetry for Community in 2023. Postcard reproductions and their associated derivative works were originally displayed at the Falmouth Historical Society's Museums on the Green from October 6th, 2023 – May 10th, 2024.<br /><br /><a href="https://falmouthpubliclibrary.omeka.net/exhibits/show/wish-you-were-here"><strong>Visit the Wish You Were Here digital exhibit to see these items on display.</strong></a>
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Calliope Poetry for Community
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2023
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Kathy Andrews, Julie Bogosian, Mary Boylan, Kathleen Casey, Mark Chester, Nancy Cherico, Meg Costello, Lisa Willow Dunn, Sally Fine , Diane Hanna, Ilene Karnow, Micheal Klehm , Alice Kociemba, Leslie Lichtenstein, Jim McIlvain, Miriam O’Neal, Marie Palmer, Scott Peterson, Laura Puopolo, Hilton Railey, Claudine Reilly, Paul Rifkin, Marilyn Rowland, Lisa Jo Rudy, Robin Smith-Johnson, Milt Williamson, Rich Youmans, Catherine Miron Youngstrom, Ron Zweig
Relation
A related resource
Anita Gunning Postcard Collection
Robert C. Hunt, Jr. Postcard Collection
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
jpg
pdf
png
docx
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Creative writing
Photography
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples include paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type Text to images of textual materials.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
Digital photograph
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Highfield Lisa Jo Rudy
Subject
The topic of the resource
Buildings
Private buildings
Description
An account of the resource
Color photograph of Highfield Hall, Falmouth, Mass.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Lisa Jo Rudy
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2023
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
jpeg
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Photograph
Highfield Hall
Lisa Jo Rudy
photograph
Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past
-
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d94fca42d8ed242003287f58a1392f27
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past
Subject
The topic of the resource
Falmouth
Creative writing
Photography
Historical postcards
Description
An account of the resource
<em>Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past</em> is a collection of community-sourced writing and art, created in response to Falmouth Public Library's historic postcard collection. It was run and curated by Calliope Poetry for Community in 2023. Postcard reproductions and their associated derivative works were originally displayed at the Falmouth Historical Society's Museums on the Green from October 6th, 2023 – May 10th, 2024.<br /><br /><a href="https://falmouthpubliclibrary.omeka.net/exhibits/show/wish-you-were-here"><strong>Visit the Wish You Were Here digital exhibit to see these items on display.</strong></a>
Creator
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Calliope Poetry for Community
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2023
Contributor
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Kathy Andrews, Julie Bogosian, Mary Boylan, Kathleen Casey, Mark Chester, Nancy Cherico, Meg Costello, Lisa Willow Dunn, Sally Fine , Diane Hanna, Ilene Karnow, Micheal Klehm , Alice Kociemba, Leslie Lichtenstein, Jim McIlvain, Miriam O’Neal, Marie Palmer, Scott Peterson, Laura Puopolo, Hilton Railey, Claudine Reilly, Paul Rifkin, Marilyn Rowland, Lisa Jo Rudy, Robin Smith-Johnson, Milt Williamson, Rich Youmans, Catherine Miron Youngstrom, Ron Zweig
Relation
A related resource
Anita Gunning Postcard Collection
Robert C. Hunt, Jr. Postcard Collection
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
jpg
pdf
png
docx
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Creative writing
Photography
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples include paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type Text to images of textual materials.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
Digital photograph
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Haunted Highfield Alice Kociemba
Subject
The topic of the resource
Buildings
Private buildings
Description
An account of the resource
Black and white photograph of Highfield Hall, Falmouth, Mass.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Alice Kociemba
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2023
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
jpeg
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Photograph
Alice Kociemba
Highfield Hall
photograph
Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past
-
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ad5a6c33aea7409b0f56997a98561823
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples include paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type Text to images of textual materials.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
Postcard
Physical Dimensions
The actual physical size of the original image
9 x 14 cm.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
The E. P. Bebee Res. Falmouth, Mass
Subject
The topic of the resource
Buildings
Private buildings
Description
An account of the resource
Front and back scans of a historic postcard of Highfield Hall, Falmouth, Mass.
Number on item: 2337.
The card is unused.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
The Metropolitan News & Pub. Co.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Robert C. Hunt, Jr. Postcard Collection
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
[ca. 1900–1999]
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
jpeg
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Postcard
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
Hunt_Village_Bldg_063
Beebe
Highfield Hall
postcards
Robert C. Hunt Jr. Postcard Collection
Wish You Were Here: Postcards from the Past
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/32209/archive/files/2b517c50374effcb0ec1da5815431654.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=JvhDOZYSvAr6Ha9hfWr3YEJREer8c%7EkOAdO0gJv2vtUz4dx8DV14OphXK-d08dZzvzxoLZfjVlpVcjeQen1DMeIYk6anTjm7ksAMyAjR%7ET4s5KxQgyOcaEAgfFqkmBxJ69eaQNi-DPnuGNcCw1SVNY9s0sHJQEL5RBbIxIS79c8DV04CuV50I8ezDKg4jGd0VB%7E6Q2xoLYSPOGU5WjBzWRjgIOvhA6SCto6ePHZ8x7ZpcVELpHbmT6GyVN-d6D6bNbEjaYWwFrjxxRalNFsc4a2wSnYnpW%7EsViy%7E8RHVXzN8XfHVo6VjfhEEMhyN2MmoKyE3-BjKpjLySmze0K5eww__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
c07fffa314cf7d5724e4cb4effca039d
PDF Text
Text
Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
Postcards from Falmouth Oral History Transcript
Recorded: August 19, 2021
Oral Historian: Mark Pearson
Interviewer: Troy Clarkson
Topic: College Light Opera Company (CLOC)
Note: The right column references postcards by identifiers searchable in the Digital
Commonwealth online collection.
00:00
[Music]
00:44
Mark
00:45
welcome we're so glad that you're here
00:47
and Falmouth has
00:49
a thriving artistic community and
00:52
certainly a rich
00:53
artistic history in the College Light
00:55
Opera Company is and has been an
00:57
important part of that so
00:59
talk to us your postcard was of course
01:02
the facility in West Falmouth that is
01:04
the home
01:05
the heart and soul of CLOC as it's
01:07
known right so tell us about the history
01:10
of the College Light Opera Company and
01:11
also
01:12
the site there in West Falmouth where
01:14
it's it's been housed sure well first
01:17
very happy to be here thanks for
01:18
reaching out uh yeah so College Light
01:20
Opera Company was founded in 1969
#cloc
#westfalmouth
1
#1969
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
01:25
and it grew out of the
01:28
defunct Oberlin Gilbert and Sullivan
01:30
Players who had been in Falmouth for
01:32
just under a decade so that was a summer
01:35
program operated by Oberlin Conservatory
01:39
designed to provide their students with
01:42
a summer performance opportunity that
01:45
was something very typical
01:47
at that time in America especially in
01:50
resort towns like Falmouth
01:53
you'd have you know any number of
01:55
college organizations and they would
01:57
just put on a different show every week
01:59
and that would be your summer
02:01
entertainment for the summer you know
02:03
folks would have uh season tickets so
02:06
for example CLOC
02:07
and at the time orbiting G&S they did
02:10
nine shows uh in nine weeks the same
02:13
program basically that we continue this
02:15
to today so families would come down
02:17
they'd have you know Tuesday night
02:19
tickets Wednesday night tickets and that
02:21
would be their regular thing for uh for
02:23
the summer and that was known as
02:26
Summer stock theater and it was very very
02:29
typical um
#oberlin
#gilbertandsullivanplayers
2
#summerstocktheater
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
02:31
it's died out significantly
02:33
there are very few organizations left
02:35
that do it in that similar
02:38
fashion
02:39
CLOC is one of the one of the remaining
02:41
ones uh on the arts landscape
02:44
and I think that's just as as a starting
02:47
point that's a really important
02:50
piece of information to say about the
02:52
organization and its place in the sort
02:54
of national landscape it's sort of
02:57
holding a torch for
02:59
summer stock which was
03:01
at one time a very very important part
03:03
of American
03:05
summer entertainment and very
03:06
specifically American it doesn't really
03:08
happen in many other countries that way
03:11
so that's sort of what CLOC is as I say
03:13
grew out of Oberlin Gilbert & Sullivan
03:15
Players who themselves sort of grew out
03:18
of an older organization called the
03:20
University Players which goes back to
03:22
the 1940s I believe and again that's
03:26
just the sort of tradition of
03:28
a group of college kids getting together
03:30
for the summer to perform
3
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
03:33
the original intent was more
03:34
entertainment but our mission has sort
03:37
of shifted over the years as we became
03:40
a
03:41
one of the last remaining organizations
03:43
to do this to really focus on the
03:45
educational aspect of that experience
03:48
the educational side of it was sort of a
03:50
side note in the old days I was like
03:51
well yeah you're going to learn how to
03:52
do it because you've got to do it
03:55
and then
03:56
it sort of became clear that hey this is
03:58
actually
03:59
a big part of what's important about
04:01
this organization so
04:02
that's why in our mission education is
04:05
equally important as the entertainment
04:07
that we do
04:09
you mentioned our our campus in West
04:11
Falmouth
04:13
which is where we
04:14
live and work we perform at the
04:16
Highfield Theater
04:18
which is
04:19
as many folks know I think
04:23
was once the stables for Highfield Hall
#highfieldtheater
4
#highfieldhall
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
04:26
so if you're familiar with Highfield
04:27
Hall uh it's the building right next
04:29
door that at one time housed the horses
04:31
and now uh since the 1930s this is a a
04:34
theater structure
04:36
and that's about four and a half miles
04:38
from our campus in West Falmouth
04:40
it's about six acres uh right
04:44
uh on the banks of the West Falmouth
04:46
Harbor where the bridge to Chapoquoit
04:49
Road is uh and the oldest building there
04:52
is uh Bridgefields Hall
04:55
which was named uh you know because of a
04:58
the bridge that's basically right in
05:00
front of the building and at the time
05:02
the fields of West Falmouth that
05:04
stretched out beyond which now of course
05:06
are
05:06
lots of houses um so Bridgefields Hall
05:10
was built in 1895
#1895
05:13
uh by a Quaker family the Scull
#quaker #scull
Gunning_West_Bldg_1580
through 1585,
Gunning_West_Bldg_1649
#westfalmoutharbor
#bridgefieldshall
Hunt_West_Bldg_482
05:16
Sara Scull uh so it's had a couple of
#sarascull
05:19
names over the years the Sara Scull
05:21
House Bridgefields Hall
05:23
the Inn at West Falmouth and simply the
5
#westfalmouthinn
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
05:25
Inn
05:26
and the Scull family
05:29
built it her husband died I believe in
05:33
1884
05:34
and
05:36
left her a widow with two children and
05:39
uh she built this as a summer home so
05:42
they were based in Philadelphia and they
05:44
would come summer in Falmouth uh as I
05:47
mentioned they were a Quaker family and
05:51
according to sort of urban legend and I
05:53
can't confirm or deny this but their
05:55
original intent was to uh to buy a
05:58
property on the island Chapoquoit Island
#1884
#chapoquoitisland
Hunt_West_Bch_496
through 499
Gunning_West_Sts_1549 &
1550,
Gunning_West_Har_1606 &
1607,
Gunning_West_Isl_1637
through 1648
06:01
and uh
06:02
I as I understand it Quakers were not
06:05
particularly welcome on the island so uh
06:09
as sort of a well I’ll show you
06:11
they bought the large lot right at the
06:14
entrance to the island so everyone going
06:15
to the island would have to drive past
6
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
06:17
their estate to get to their summer
06:20
state uh it was designed by
06:23
J. Williams Beal a Boston
06:26
architect he had recently moved from New
06:28
York to Boston he had spent some time
06:30
abroad
06:32
and he was commissioned to design the
06:34
building uh it is of
06:37
somewhat architectural interest in that
06:39
it is a
06:41
Queen Anne
06:42
Tudor revival which is unusual for our
06:45
area most houses being built at the time
06:48
were what we would call the shingle
06:49
style
06:50
you know everything that standing still
06:52
is covered with shingles and this was
06:55
a style that was more popular for town
06:58
houses sort of stucco half timbered
07:00
style
07:02
and it also has
07:03
the
07:04
whispers of the emerging
07:07
early modern architectural movement in
07:10
that was inspired by a lot of Japanese
07:12
architecture and the sort of play
07:14
between exterior interior spaces so if
#jwilliamsbeal
7
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
07:17
you're going around the building you'll
07:18
be in a staircase all of a sudden the
07:20
staircase is outside that it's inside
07:22
again
07:23
and it has a lot of very dominant
07:25
horizontal lines which sort of suggests
07:29
where Frank Lloyd Wright was heading at
07:31
the time you know fitting buildings more
07:33
into the area that they're that they're
07:35
set in
07:37
so yeah the Scull family uh
07:40
lived there for about ten years
07:41
uh Sara Scull died in 1910
07:45
uh at which time it was uh sold and
07:48
converted to an inn in 1912
07:51
and it basically served as an inn
07:54
and restaurant uh until 1975
07:58
when it closed and CLOC moved in in 75.
08:02
I mentioned earlier CLOC was founded in
08:03
1969.
08:05
so the question is well what was
08:06
happening at that time uh well Oberlin
08:09
before CLOC and then CLOC were
08:11
originally in residence at what was
08:13
known as Tanglewood House
#1910
#1912
#1975
#tanglewood
Gunning_Village_Bldg_0473
08:15
which if you're familiar with the
8
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
08:16
history of the Beebe family
#beebe
08:19
here in Falmouth they actually built two
08:22
mansions up on the hill there was
08:24
Highfield Hall which is uh
08:28
Queen Anne but again leaning a little
08:29
bit more Shingle style and then there
08:31
was an iconically Queen Anne house which
08:34
was called Tanglewood and they were
08:36
built for the brothers and they shared
08:38
the barn and the stables
08:41
and Tanglewood was the longtime
08:43
dormitory for
08:45
both Oberlin and College Light Opera
08:48
now when the property was given to the
08:51
Cape
08:52
Conservatory they were uh unable to keep
08:56
up all of the buildings that were on the
08:58
property and the first one that really
09:00
had to go was Tanglewood so it was
09:01
announced in
09:03
uh 74 that they would be razing
09:06
Tanglewood and there was not enough time
09:08
for
09:09
the sort of uh
09:10
you know grassroots movement that ended
09:12
up saving
09:13
Highfield
#capeconservatory
#capesymphony
9
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
09:14
several years later so Tanglewood fell
09:17
to the wrecking ball and CLOC was left
09:20
presumably homeless um but uh
09:23
J. K. Lilly
09:25
uh stepped forward at that time and he
09:27
had he and his wife had recently
09:29
acquired the West Falmouth Inn and he
09:31
said you know what I’m going to do is
09:33
let's have y'all move over to West
09:35
Falmouth
09:36
we'll rent the property to you for a
09:37
dollar a year until you get back on your
09:39
feet figure out
09:41
a better solution so the Company moved
09:44
sort of lock stock and barrel to west
09:46
Falmouth in 1975
09:49
B Haslun one of the original founders of
#haslun #roberthaslun
09:51
the organization and his wife Ursula uh
#ursulahaslun
09:54
got married and had their wedding
09:56
reception uh a week before the Company
09:59
arrived in 75 and then the first thing
10:01
the company the 75 Company did was they
10:03
went up to Tanglewood salvaged
10:05
everything they could and trucked it
10:07
over to West Falmouth and we've been
10:10
there ever since
10:11
um about five years after that so we're
#lilly #josiahklilly
10
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
10:16
into
10:17
77 78 ish
10:20
uh
10:21
the Lillys decided that
10:23
they didn't really want to be landlords
10:25
for this property and uh the best
10:28
best use of the facility would be to
10:30
demolish all the structures uh
10:33
four struc— uh five structures at the
10:35
time
10:37
to make a public park
10:39
and uh so there was a big effort to find
10:42
CLOC another home
10:44
in the uh in the area
10:46
and uh that kept coming up with no
10:50
no viable
10:52
alternatives and then finally the uh the
10:55
Board of Trustees struck a deal with the
10:58
Lillys which was to buy the property for
11:01
the cost of tearing it down and turning
11:03
into a park
11:04
so they were able to
11:06
get a mortgage raise some funds and then
11:08
I think by 79 or 80 they had paid off
11:10
the full mortgage
11:12
and the property was was CLOC’s um as I
11:16
mentioned there's the there's the inn uh
11
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
11:18
which was built in 1895 which is the
11:20
most iconic building on the property
11:23
then there are four outbuildings so
11:25
there are two twin cottages which we
11:27
call Cottage One and Two on the harbor
11:29
that were built in the 30s to uh
11:33
as the inn as the West Falmouth Inn was
11:35
expanding those were sort of uh you
11:37
could bring your family and rent a
11:39
cottage but you would dine in the inn
11:42
and then Cottages Three and Four which
11:44
were added in the sixties uh Cottage
11:46
Three which is out behind the property
11:48
was a caretaker cottage Cottage Four
11:50
which is right next to the bike path uh
11:53
was built as a staff house also in the
11:56
mid 60s
11:58
they dug a pond so we have about an acre
12:02
man-made pond right in the center of the
12:05
property
12:07
and yeah so the West Falmouth campus is
12:10
where we do obviously
12:12
we live all
12:13
those buildings are all dormitory
12:15
buildings
12:16
and we also have our dining facility it
12:17
was fortunate that it was an inn so it
12
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
12:21
came with a large industrial kitchen and
12:23
the dining rooms are perfectly appointed
12:25
for uh for the Company
12:28
as well as our costume shop is housed in
12:30
the former Pony Room which was the uh
12:33
the bar and lounge of the West Falmouth
12:35
Inn
12:37
and we recently just actually
12:40
minutes ago
12:41
completed a new facility on on the
12:44
property which is called Lucas Hall
12:48
which is a
12:50
is the first new structure since the 60s
12:53
on the property and it's a large
12:56
rehearsal and office facility and the
12:58
purpose
12:59
for that is to
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take the stress off of
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Bridgefields Hall which has sort of
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served
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as a catch-all space so it's been our
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main rehearsal space our dining space
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we've carved office spaces out of common
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areas
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uh and so this is an opportunity to
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actually create
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a building designed and intended for its
#lucashall
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13:23
purpose which is to
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do all of the rehearsal of the
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preparation for the shows that we do up
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at Highfield Theater as well as provide
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office spaces for our summer staff but
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also for our year-round staff
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none of the other buildings on campus
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are winterized or heated so as soon as
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you have to shut the water off you have
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to shut the water off
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but this building
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is insulated and will have
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year-round use which is which is a big
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uh
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big change for us and very exciting
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wonderful well thank you for that
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detailed history because it
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both the property and the organization
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are richly woven uh through the the
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really the soul of our community so
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thanks for that
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that virtual tour with us that gives uh
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our viewers a sense of of the history
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before the camera went on we were
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talking about the role that uh the
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College Light Opera Company plays in so
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many lives not just in the performers
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�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
14:20
but in people that have enjoyed the
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shows or people feel a connection uh to
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the organization and so
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as we record this the Woods Hole Film
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Festival is about to open in Woods Hole
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and as I told you I interviewed someone
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this week
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who is one of the filmmakers that has a
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film
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his connection to Falmouth began in 1990
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or 91 when he was a performer with the
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College Light Opera Company and
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that sort of lifetime connection to the
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organization has happened thousands and
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thousands of times because over the
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course of more than 50 years
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uh
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you know you've had so many lives that
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have been impacted and enriched by the
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organization yeah it's
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the a couple of things I always try to
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hit when I’m talking about CLOC you
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know one of which is uh if you're in
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Falmouth if you live here and you know
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the CLOC is here
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you may be
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permitted to make the mistake to think
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�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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oh every community must have one of
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these but this is a
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truly unique organization and it is
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something that
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uh is uniquely
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situated your Falmouth is uniquely
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situated to support this kind of an
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organization um you couldn't do this
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just anywhere and this organization
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couldn't have survived in just any
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community you need a good base of of
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folks who
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appreciate the performing arts who will
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not only attend but will support the
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performing arts and
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a certain uh continuity
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which I think Falmouth provides and
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in uh on the other aspect is what you
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mentioned um this sort of networking you
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know we do
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provide the students with a sort of
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educational experience but the
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experience is more learning by doing
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they've all been to university they've
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all been studying their craft we don't
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provide classes we don't provide
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lectures we simply say okay you've
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16:21
you've been studying this
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now do it and do it
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repeat it for nine nine weeks
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and uh in a very intense environment and
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what
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one learns in that environment is a is
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this what I want to do with my life
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because if
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if you get through that uh really 11
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weeks when you count the pre-season time
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get through those 11 weeks and you're
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like I never want to do that again then
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you probably don't want to have a career
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because your career is going to be that
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you know if you're actually paying the
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bills with performing arts your career
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is going to be that hectic so that's
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thing one and then thing two you you
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realize how to streamline your own work
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um and be more efficient which is also
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important when it's a question of
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economics and trying to pay the bills
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it's great if you're a wonderful
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designer but you can only design one
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show and it takes you six months well
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that's not gonna pay your rent uh but
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then thirdly and most importantly it's
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the connections that they they make when
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they're here because they are it's a
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hyper concentration of uh
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the best of the best
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in these programs so it's those
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who really
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are
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thinking this is what I cannot do
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anything else with my life this is what
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I want to do with my life and then they
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meet
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all these other people in their age
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group who are feeling the same and they
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end up being a very tight-knit
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group within the performing arts
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community as they go on you know they
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all they go to New York or some of them
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go to Europe but they keep connections
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and they keep talking and
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it also spans generations so you go you
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know you go to
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move to New York after summer CLOC and
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you're at a cattle call audition
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and it is
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very
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likely
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if not a given that at least one person
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behind that table has either been the
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CLOC or has a strong connection to
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CLOC because that's just how small the
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community is and then of course
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the sort of beneficial residual for
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Falmouth is they also have that deep
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emotional connection to the community
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because it you know for many people it's
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one of the most uh memorable
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summers of their lives and they spent it
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here so they do tend to come back and
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tend to
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keep connections with uh you know not
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just their company members but locals
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that they met while they were here and
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then they may end up doing something
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like the Falmouth um film festival or
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you know some of them
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have come back every year just to do the
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Road Race because they did it that one
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summer that they were playing trumpet in
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the orchestra you know so it's uh it is
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a very
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uh important
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organization
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for on the national scale but also I
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think for us in Falmouth it really you
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know when you are talking about
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your home community and you're giving
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folks some information about it it's
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like okay well Falmouth what's Falmouth
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oh well you know Woods Hole and the
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ferries are going to the Vineyard and um
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there's WHOI and all of this great
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science going on and there's College
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Light Opera Company which is this
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incredible uh you know
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unique
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summer program for for young artists so
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I often refer to our community as a
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mosaic
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and
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CLOC is one of the shining tiles in
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that mosaic for sure and that's what uh
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in in my full-time work I work in
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government and have worked in many
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places
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and there are no other places in my
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experience that quite bring
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just such
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an array of tiles to the mosaic and the
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arts community in the scientific
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community
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and people's willingness to engage
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in so many different ways and it really
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really
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makes this place special and and CLOC
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is certainly an important part of that
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yeah I mean I would I would absolutely
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agree I think Falmouth is so
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interesting in that it is a small town
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but it has
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large city scale
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uh
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bells and whistles to it which is so
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crazy you know that we get to live in
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this community where there are
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world-class
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everything happening around us and we
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can walk on the bike path and there are
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little villages yeah it's it really is
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that's what Falmouth is to me I I think
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you said it perfectly this amazing
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mosaic of of
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all any
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any piece of which would be incredible
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for a community but we're so spoiled you
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know to have it all here
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you bet well one of the other phrases
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that I love to use is that it takes a
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name to make a town but people to make a
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�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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community so Mark we thank you for
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sharing the time with us and for you
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being one of the people that really
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enriches that mosaic and and thank you
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for your leadership at CLOC and keeping
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that tradition going thank you so much
22
�
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Transcript of Mark Pearson's Oral History on CLOC
1884
1895
1910
1912
1969
1975
Beebe
Bridgefields Hall
Cape Conservatory
Cape Symphony
Chapoquoit Island
CLOC
Gilbert and Sullivan Players
Haslun
Highfield Hall
Highfield Theater
J. Williams Beal
josiah k lilly
lilly
lucas hall
mark pearson
oberlin
oral history
Postcards from Falmouth
quaker
robert haslun
sara scull
scull
summer stock theater
tanglewood
transcript
troy clarkson
ursula haslun
West Falmouth
west falmouth harbor
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woods hole film festival
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https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/32209/archive/files/a30d2a1e0689b12852205b232cf6e0c9.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=RXiH4fSHbScNP9YXuucF6MM0DK-%7EGtYiuYmjSYwtN8WmzuMal4N4o4MmkbQg7FniYz5wgrB5E9AUHgp9baRpgqmS8FHztxcuAYx-Dxk5s4djw%7E07c6KqmSKtQYKlRAN4%7EBro7rtXs62ND7G04TF%7Et8YhJ-VcVgr%7EUISfo%7EBDsZ97XtQXrgLKhP-AJxwgUda3p7G64jnz3yKIYpAJfujFKP-ySqu7WbboE6KXI918KWuDNZtZd0hXLIEWpCujyLrMlRVfKgQKeT8MREEhgw%7EQomGfPVoOjygeJ-LbeTKHVG9dd%7EjwJjs9EvMivu2SOCmVLoU7QY70W0gMFe%7EwRGHA%7Ew__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
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PDF Text
Text
Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
Postcards from Falmouth Zoom Program Transcript
Recorded: September 23, 2020
Presenter: Tom Turkington
Host: Jill Erickson
Topic: Before I Forget: A Boyhood of Little Drama, by Tom Turkington
Available from Falmouth Public Library under 920.71 Turkington
Note: The right column references postcards by identifiers searchable in the Digital
Commonwealth online collection.
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[Music]
good morning everyone this is a big
adventure
for both uh Tom and I this is the first
time
that I’ve done such a large Zoom event
with
people that I don't necessarily know
we've been doing a lot of
Zoom staff meetings um but this is quite
of a different level
and um I’ve also been hoping that we
could have Tom Turkington
talk to us for some time and I’m glad
that this this
morning is finally the time that it can
happen
um it's really a delight uh to
to be here and I’m glad that you're all
here
so let me just tell you a little bit
about what
what was the beginnings of this program
and
that is uh Postcards from Falmouth which
was
which is a special local history project
of the Falmouth Public Library
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that is based upon our historical
postcard collection of noted buildings
landmarks
and locations within the town of
Falmouth
introduced in 1869 as a way of sending a
simple message
postcards quickly evolved beyond their
practical purpose
to become the universal souvenir that
brightens everyone's mailboxes
and I have to say one of the things we
did when we were closed we would send
a lot of our patrons postcards which was
people
were delighted with um however postcards
also provide us with rare glimpses into
the past
and serve as a way of documenting
history
that is why we jumped at the chance when
we saw the opportunity
for a grant to develop projects that use
historical documents
such as our historical postcard
collection to discover unknown facts and
stories about
Falmouth during days gone by after all
to collect preserve and share such
resources
is what the Falmouth Public Library has
been doing since 1792
Postcards from Falmouth has been made
possible through a Library Services
and Technology Act grant which is
administered through the Massachusetts
Board of Library Commissioners
this series of talks is also made
possible thanks to the Falmouth Public
Library Trustees
and of course FCTV and we hope by the
end of this series
that those of you listening will be
inspired to look at our postcard
collections
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#1869
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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and share your memories of Falmouth and
somebody who has
a lot of memories of Falmouth is Tom
Turkington
and I have to say I I have been
delighted um reading the book and I
think you will be
as well um Tom did write a memoir of his
childhood
in Falmouth which is a revelation in so
many ways for those of us
I’ve been here 30 years and I still
learn lots of things from his book
Before I Forget A Boyhood of Little
Drama
and there will be time for questions at
the end which you can type
into the chat so without further ado
although I will say I particularly Tom
liked
all the information about Panis
silversmiths I have a Panis ring right
here on my finger
and um uh Matt Pearson with whom I live
remembers this has many of the same
memories you have of Panis so
um a really uh a treat to read about
Panis and
and your relationship with Panis
silversmiths um
for those of you that don't know Panis
read the book if he doesn't mention it
this morning so I will now
give over the screen to Tom Turkington
thanks Jill for that nice introduction
after a long
awkward wait uh but that's Zoom for
you um
just myself I was born in Falmouth in
1949
and spent most of the first 18 years of
my life there
uh I was there for another 15 years as a
young adult I live in New Hampshire
now
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#panis
#1949
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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the book was my entry to this
program but you got to understand the
book
is not there was no research
everything in here um
just I drew it from my memory bank and
um
surprisingly enough people have looked
and said uh hey
there's a lot of details that how do you
remember those things
uh and so accurately and I guess I just
have a mind that that does that sort of
thing
it came about because I found as I was
I actually wrote it four or five years
ago I found as I was getting into my 50s
and 60s that
I sort of developed an interest in my
parents’
history my grandparents what were they
like when their kids
and what was the world like around them
what did they do with their time
and all that and of course they weren't
around to tell me
and it occurred to me that probably my
kids someday would get into their 50s
and 60s
and they would begin to develop the same
interest about me
and I wouldn't be around to tell them so
I put it down a book
and my own kids in
30 or 40 years can refer back and
know a little bit more about where they
came from
uh it is a memoir
so it's not about Falmouth per se
it's about me uh memoirs are like that
but of course because I was in Falmouth
people places events things that were
going on in Falmouth between
in the 50s and 60s are scattered
throughout the book
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this project as Jill was saying sort of
sprang forth from
postcards old postcards and uh
I don't have any postcards here as props
but the way I’m going to approach this
is to just sort of imagine what might be
on a postcard
and then ruminate a little bit about
that thing that could have been on a
postcard
and uh and do some readings from the
books that relate to it
one of the uh one of the most
photographed places in Falmouth
is probably Main Street and uh when I’m
#mainstreet
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back in Falmouth which I often am
uh it's kind of fun to go down Main
Street and
look and of course there's been massive
turnover
as there always always has been but in
some respects hasn't changed too much
Main Street when I was a kid yeah you
could
you could get auto parts there you could
get your photos developed at Ortin’s
photo shop
you could uh yeah you could go to a
movie
there were two movie theaters on main
street uh
okay none of those are there anymore but
pretty much what you have now
is places to eat and places to buy
clothes
and gifts and really 50 years ago
there were plenty of places to eat most
of them were lunch counters at J.J.
Newberry’s
and that at the Rexall Drugs
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#jjnewberrys
#rexall
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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and at the Sandbar and you know all up
and down Main Street there were places
to eat but they were
fast food and it wasn't junk food it was
fast because you'd go in you sit down
Ralph Sullivan’d and come over say what do
you want
tell them a ham and cheese sandwich and
two minutes later there it was in front
of you
uh so now we have high-end restaurants
instead
okay that says something about the
economy
um and one of the uh
one of the other things that you used to
do on Main Street that you don't do
anymore is
you go shopping for your food
and there's a little something in my
book about
food shop
one indicator of the growth and
modernization of Falmouth has been the
evolution of the food stores
when I was little and we lived on Mill
#sandbar
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Road the closest thing to a supermarket
in town was the A&P on Main Street
it was right next to Town Hall which was
razed in the 60s to make way for a
parking lot in a nice little park
that's Peg Noonan Park there were other
food stores besides the A&P
S.S. Pierce for example but the A&P was
about it for general food shops
it was a little bit larger though not
nearly as neat and clean as the standard
convenience store today
there were maybe four or five aisles
half the width and one-third the length
of what we're used to now
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�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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if you were over by the butcher shop the
smell all around was
meat getting old by the checkout lines
they kept the coffee grinders
very large machines considering their
simple function
and that whole end of the store smelled
of ground up eight o'clock coffee which
never got swept up
my lingering impression of a trip to the
A&P with mom in my early years is one of
having to deal with inconvenience
no place to park hard walking on a badly
ruptured sidewalk
difficulty opening the door sticking
wheels on the shopping cart
traffic jams throughout the store piles
of merchandise stacked in the way
long waits in line but the reward was to
watch
hear and smell the coffee grinder at
work
oh this is more I’m talking about the
evolution of Falmouth I’m not just
reminiscing on going to the A&P when I
was a kid
now comes the evolution first National
Stores was the first chain to offer
shopping relief to the beleaguered
Falmouth housewife
they opened up a snazzy new supermarket
at the foot of Shore Street
#nationalstores
#shorestreet
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either just before just after we moved
back to town
it had a parking lot automatic doors
wide aisles new carts
and sales and promotions of course it
was an instant success
which was noted by the Stop and Shop
chain which acted quickly and
radically they got away from Main Street
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#stopandshop
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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and onto some vacant eight acreage of
Heights corner where they opened up the
store that was bigger yet
and had a modernistic arched roof and a
huge parking lot and a few other little
stores attached
and reachable by a covered walkway and
they called it Falmouth Plaza
trying not to be outdone but being
outdone nonetheless the A&P
put up a new store on a vacant lot just
off Main Street
it was a whole lot bigger cleaner and
more amenable than their outworn old
place which became a stationary store
but not as much as the new Stop and Shop
or even bigger supermarket that was
later to come to the Jones Road
intersection
and most disastrous of all the fools
built it on Scranton Avenue
there it remained for decades poorly
managed
lightly patronized constantly emblematic
of the decline of the great Atlantic and
Pacific Tea Company
well if you were to buy a modern day
postcard
you wouldn't have to look long to find
one of Falmouth Harbor
#falmouthheights
#falmouthplaza
#jonesroad
#scrantonavenue
#falmouthharbor
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now Falmouth Harbor was on
was once Deacon’s Pond and as I
#deaconspond
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understand it Deacon's Pond was not open
to the Sound
it was land locked and if you were
driving down Clinton Avenue towards the
Heights
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#vineyardsound
#clintonavenue
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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you get to where the Clam Shack is now
and you just kept right on going
and the next thing you know you were
heading up into Falmouth Heights
uh of course this was pretty much before
automobiles existed
and I’m not sure exactly how it happened
but uh
I would say the town realized that there
were a lot of rich people now
starting to move into town during the
summer and they had
pleasure craft and the Old Stone Dock at
#oldstonedock
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the
foot of Shore Street was a was pretty
much a failure
and um so it's decided to
open up Deacon's Pond dredge it and make
a harbor out of it
at the time I lived there Scranton
Avenue was
practically a wasteland and I don't know
why it was very close to the center of
town
but Scranton Avenue which paralleled
right along the side of the harbor
uh there was nothing there there was if
you were heading up from Main Street
towards the mouth of the harbor
it was all field on your right there was
a carnival there every summer could have
had
the Barnstable County Fair there there
was that much open space
uh you got to Queen Street still nothing
still just feels
um and then
three quarters of the way down Scranton
Avenue it was bing bing bing bing there
were four or five
9
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#barnstablecountyfair
#queenstreet
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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very modest kind of weather beaten homes
um
in a row and then again nothing until
you got to the mouth of the harbor
I’m not sure why Scranton Avenue was uh
such a pariah in town but
hardly anybody lived there um
but there was there was something
special about Scranton Avenue
I’m going to tell you about it
we moved there in
June of ‘58.
this was not the first time the
Turkingtons took up residence on
Scranton Avenue
the uninhabited wasteland between us and
Main Street
had been for one brief shining moment in
the late 40s
most densely populated neighborhood in
whole town whatever federal agency came
into being for the purpose of providing
cheap housing for returning veterans
built a colony of concrete blocked
road buildings dwellings
when Mom and Dad and baby Eric first
moved to town from upstate New York
that's where they lived we did not
coddle our young veterans
life here was rather spare and the
grateful residents moved out as soon as
they could find something better
which in our case was the house on
Fairview Avenue
just down the street my first home
the block dwellings were demolished when
the need for them passed but one
dominant structure remains until the
early 60s
it consisted of one very large room with
a couple of little ones at one end
I’m guessing now but it may have served
as a play and gathering place for the
residents
so here were rows of apartment-style
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#fairviewavenue
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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dwelling units
with a community recreation building
open space
all around and an unobstructed view of
the harbor
dig it a rock bottom low budget
disposable development for penniless
veterans
served as the model for the vacation
communities for the bourgeoisie that now
infests
practically every harborfront site in
New England
any pictures taken of Surf Drive
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um Surf Drive was my beach and um
I think was was the first widely used
public beach
in Falmouth the first beach that was
treated as such with
parking lot and bath house and
snack bar and lifeguards and all that
I lived about a mile away and I used to
go there quite regularly
during the summer time um that's where
the Old Stone Dock was
you look at the Old Stone Dock now and
it's it's just a
pile of rocks that have been gradually
settling into the into the sea but at
one time it was
um it was built to be kind of the
original
Falmouth Harbor um
people would unload there and come in in
little boats and unload on the dock and
then
ship the stuff down Shore Street to
center it down
and other stuff would get shipped back
uh
I I don't think it ever worked out very
well just to look at it you see it just
wasn't that big and uh certainly wasn't
#surfdrive #surfdrivebeach
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�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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that stable because it had to be rebuilt
a couple of times
but it was my beach and it was very
popular beach in those days
and one of its most popular features
and enjoyable ones was the raft
not there anymore hasn't been there in a
long time
I spent a lot of summer days hanging out
at Surf Drive Beach which was a public
beach a mile from home
the town had a multi-faceted raft about
50 yards offshore that offered all kinds
of opportunities for fun
it had a diving board just a few feet
above the water
a platform about six feet up and another
about 10 feet up
and it had a long slide with a shiny
metal surface that had a couple of burrs
on it that you had to watch out for
or you'd rip your bathing suit on the
way down if not your flesh
floated on two massive pontoons which as
long as they stayed watertight
kept the raft a foot above the water
this allowed daredevil boys to dive off
the raft swim under a pontoon
and come up for air under the raft we
played a lot of tag on that raft
there were all sorts of tricky extremely
hazardous ways to tag someone if you
were hit
one was to jump off the high platform
and tag a kid standing on the raft as
you went by
then swim under the pontoons and get
away
this meant that you'd be jumping from 10
feet up missing the edge of the raft by
inches
then going underwater and not being seen
again for a while
the beach committee provided this raft
for the amusement of their beachgoers
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�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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with never a thought for liability
accidents that's what lifeguards were
for
now I it's hard to photograph
Beebe’s Woods but Beebe’s Woods has uh
#beebewoods
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um become if anything ever more
important part of uh center of town
uh there were two mansions up there uh
there is one remaining and it's been uh
grandly and uh oh
beautifully overdone redone
fixed up made into its original state
that that would be Highfield
it was also Tanglewood and these were
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the mansions that were owned by the Beebes
who uh bought
really just about all the land between
the railroad tracks
the bike path and Sippewissett Road east to
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west
north to south pretty much Sippewissett Road
almost down to um
huge parcel of land uh
in my time as as a kid uh
some sections of that all Beebe’s Woods
were kind of
sold off I think uh Greengate became
one of them
uh one development and Marvin
Gardens Marvin Circle became another
uh there's still a huge parcel of land
out there that
as of late 60s was about to be developed
it was very close to being sold to
some people who were going to just build
more green gates
uh and then J. K. Lilly great
uh benefactor of Falmouth
bought the whole place and gave
13
#highfieldhall
#tanglewood
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#beebe
#shiningseabikeway
#sippewissettroad
#greengate
#marvincircle
#lilly
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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most of it to the town the town has
since put in nice wide trails for
walking
and it's become a very popular place for
walkers hikers joggers people with dogs
uh it's a wonderful asset of course
and the crown jewel in Beebe’s Woods is the
Punch Bowl
which is a kettle hole a large pond kind
of way out and
you know back then it was out in the
middle of nowhere I think a lot of
uh most most
growing boys in town knew where to find
it could direct you to it but uh
you know they're just little beaten
paths i was very easy to get lost in
there
and uh but the Punch Bowl was um
was a real attraction and I had an
episode there I had many episodes there
there was one episode in particular that
stuck in my mind all these years later
Mark Denman and I hiked up into Beebe’s
Woods fairly often
not always with a trip to the Punch Bowl
in mind but we usually wound up there at
some point
our main activities were skinny dipping
smoking cigarettes when we could procure
them
catching and releasing bullfrogs
throwing rocks making funny sounds and
listening for the echoes
one fine June afternoon we were swimming
in the middle of the pond when we heard
shouts from the little rocky landing at
the foot of the trail
Denman Turkington
we looked over and saw Donnie Kudo and
Jimmy Carey
two kids a couple of years older than us
standing on the rocks
we've got your clothes and so they did
by the time we got out of the water they
14
#punchbowl
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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had a long head start and all of our
duds
shoes included we had that empty feeling
that he falls all of us from time to
time
usually when we least expect it this
time I’m really screwed
walking on clothes through the woods
wasn't the problem we were unlikely to
encounter anybody there
the problem was what happened when the
woods end
getting to mark's house was our only
viable option as he lived pretty close
to the edge of the woods
trouble was once we were out in the open
we would have to cross the railroad
tracks
run down a short unoccupied dirt road
then get to the other side of palmer
avenue
which was route 28 which was the busiest
road in town however we got through
all that we then would have to cut
through a neighbor's yard to get to the
little wooded area surrounding the
Denmans’
and then what hi mom I’m home and I’m
stark naked
so is Tom well we had plenty of time to
think all this through
and what we came up with was we'd skulk
through the backyards of some of the
homes this side of Palmer Ave
#palmeravenue
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looking for laundry we could steal from
somebody's clothesline to cover
ourselves up with
we couldn't find any which we probably
wouldn't we'd crouch in the bushes
besides route 28
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�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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in broad daylight in a heavily populated
section of town
hoping to remain unseen until there was
a break in the traffic
then we'd streak across the road through
the neighbor's yard to Mark's house
get some clothes on and catch hell it
wasn't much of a plan but it was the
best we could do
then just a while before the end of the
trail we saw something up in the
branches a pair of underpants
and look over there a shirt and a pair
of sneakers in the middle of the trail
what good guys thanks Donnie thanks
Jimmy
sorry about all those awful things we
said about you hiking back
from the Punch Bowl it's truly amazing
how in a distressing situation appears
to be heading for the worst
and for some reason the worst doesn't
come to pass
we not only are grateful for whatever
prevented the worst from happening
but wholly unresentful of whoever
created the distressing situation in the
first place
relief is surely one of life's most
rewarding feelings
Falmouth managed to cluster all its
schools right in the center of the
village
first there was Lawrence Academy then
#lawrenceacademy
that became Lawrence High School
Gunning_Village_Bldg_236 & 237
#lawrencehighschool
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through 0257
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next to the library right on Main Street
and that got too big well right across
what is now Bates Road from from the
high school
was the village school
16
#katharineleebatesroad
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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elementary school now the Margaret A.
#mullenhallschool
Gunning_Village_Bldg_0232
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Mullen School right over there was a
Hall School which was for fifth and
sixth graders
and then when it came time to build a
new high school they just went across
Shivericks Pond
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built a really fine new high school I
think this was 1953.
and to my mind that building
now called the Lawrence School and
Junior High School uh it's the best
school building this town ever had
and I hope it's there forever uh I spent
six years there
I was in the last uh the last class
it was built as a 7 through 12
and of course within not very many years
after it was built
it was overcrowded and
so they built a middle school over on
Morse Pond
um so I was the last in the last class
that started in seventh grade and stayed
there
through twelfth grade
um it's a very functional building very
attractive building
and I probably didn't feel so at the
time but
now that I look back on it I realized
that
most of my teachers there were really
very good
um I had one
at least one real loser of a teacher and
and uh
that fellow is get some play in the in
my book here
um but uh most of them
were really good um Miss Buchanan I
#shiverickspond
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#1953
#lawrencejuniorhighschool
#morsepondschool
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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locked horns with her a lot but she was
a fine teacher
um Jim Kinney
Earl Mills through the athletic
department and phys ed
these are people I have a lot to say
about
and I can't help thinking back on Pat
Moorman
she was my sophomore year English
teacher
she was very much one of a kind craggy of
feature and lean of build she had an
outsized personality
she was the tallest woman nay even the
tallest person in the school
her nickname among the kids was Moose
she was close friends or perhaps shared
a home with
a secretarial teacher Miss Ogden who was
the shortest
together they looked like Mutt and Jeff
like most staff members in the English
department
Miss Moorman had an undisguised love of
the language in its greatest classic
works
her personal predilection was for
grammar and syntax
we spent quite a bit of time diagramming
sentences in the classroom
and if there was within a kid the
slightest potential interest in this
highly analytic activity
as there was in me Miss Moorman could
come to it
she could get very animated trying to
get across to us the subtleties of a
complicated sentence
what really distinguished Miss Moorman;s
class aside from the total immersion
and grammar was her readiness to put the
lesson aside and expound upon subjects
unrelated to our work
prejudice politics human foibles life's
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#earlmills
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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ironies
she didn't so much engendered discussion
as inform us of her views and passions
she did so with vigor and then it was
back to the lesson
she was a tough grader and not very
understanding of excuses
but after many years at LHS she still
got a kick out of the kids
didn't hide that fact like most of our
teachers
she had her moments of cluelessness
concerning the ways of fifteen-year-olds
I wonder if there are any teachers left
who still instruct a room full of silly
boys
that an abrupt exclamation is properly
termed
an ejaculation not many I bet
together with my parents and a few
others she was on the team that left me
with a great appreciation for proper
artful use of English
low tolerance for those who care not to
use it correctly
when I’m confronted with a
professionally butchered piece of
writing
as happens more and more frequently as I
age
I can't help thinking or saying this
person
just wasn't paying attention in English
class
it's Miss Moorman’s class I think of them
um another thing about Lawrence was
um
why was it Lawrence I mean it was
Falmouth it was
the public high school in Falmouth
Barnstable High School Bourne High School
Sandwich High School every time you go
to
town has a high school supports the high
school
19
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
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high school is named after that town
except in Falmouth it was Lawrence and
um
I didn't really mind that but
uh I was on an athletic team
an athletic team that had an
extraordinary amount of success
go to big track meets and uh
a lot of us performed high and placed
very high in championship
events well one third of the people
watching
would think that we're from the city of
Lawrence oh no wonder they're good
they're
a big city they they got a lot of kids
to drop draw from
and about a third of the people thought
we were some hot shot prep school
downtown
ah no wonder they're good they uh they
can recruit from all over
and then the rest of people knew that we
were we were the public high school in
town
well we were we're proud of our town we
were
pleased to be from Falmouth and uh it
kind of irked us
that um most people thought we were
not what we actually were um
but this goes back to uh again correct
me if I’m wrong hey
nobody's out there to correct me so uh
1840s maybe 1850s there was a Mr.
Lawrence
had a lot of money big man in town
and uh offered the town a
substantial piece of money to um
build an academy uh sort of the first
secondary school and Falmouth
and um well thrifty Cape Cod is
only too happy to take him up on his
offer so
the only obligation was they had to name
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#shubaellawrence
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it after him
so that was the first Lawrence Academy
which I believe to be
now the building that is the Chamber of
Commerce
off of Main uh
town grew number of high school kids
kids going to
high school grew so they built a new
building but the name came with
that building was bursting at the seams
after a while so they built a new high
school and the name came with it
finally in I think it was 73
uh they built that new high school out
on Gifford Street
and decided to call it Falmouth High
School
any true history of Falmouth
any comprehensive history of Falmouth
especially mid-century families
would not be complete unless it had some
material
on the track teams
at the high school um
a little bit of self-interest here uh
I was involved with uh running sports in
two different ways
one as a runner in high school very
extremely dedicated and pretty
successful one
and then um as a coach I coached uh
cross-country at Falmouth for 13 years
later on
and was successful and also
lucky but
there was from the through the 60s 70s
80s um Falmouth
running sports at the high school were
were
known statewide for excellence
um it was Jim Kalperis
had the track teams in the 60s
John Carroll started up the girls track
and had
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#falmouthchamberofcommerce
#giffordstreet
#falmouthhighschool
#jameskalperis
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extraordinary success through the 70s I
was coaching cross country in the 80s
but it all started with Kalpe
and I’d like to tell you a little bit
about it
now about Kalpe some new kids
including myself at one time might call
him Mr. Kalperis
and there are a few ass kissers who'd
call him Coach but to everyone else he
was Kalpe
he bore considerable resemblance to
Groucho Marx
from the hustling gait bent slightly at
the waist
to the mischievous dancing eyebrows to
the ever-present cigar
to the offhand commentary from the
corner of the mouth
to the vague but usually accurate sense
you got when he talked to you
that you were being caught you knew not
he was an operator who saw more clearly
than most
that if everybody follows all the rules
to the letter all the time
nothing worthwhile will ever happen
of course he was not all things to all
people there were those who felt he came
up and might
in the teaching of science which was his
primary job description
he was probably an energetic
knowledgeable instructor but he could be
distracted with
any is the time I’d wander off from a
study hall or a lunch break or another
class with a teammate to drop in on Kalpe
seeing us at the door he would assign
someone to monitor the class while we
all went into the adjoining
audio visual storage room to screw
spikes into racing shoes or
discuss the day's workout plot strategy
for the Dartmouth meet
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there was a rare enlivening mix of humor
gravity
and intensity of purpose in dealing with
Kalpe and participating on his teams
he became a coach of runners a year
after the LHS cross country program was
successfully begun under Don Jocelyn
moved on after that inaugural 1960
season
the team was then made up largely of
underprivileged black kids who so often
went through four years of high school
without ever tasting success in
school-related endeavor
the principal Mr. Marshall wanted to see
the program continue after Jocelyn left
and presently recognized Kalpe as a good
man to take it over so he asked him if
he would
he did Kalpe knew nothing about distance
running when he took over the
cross-country team
and nothing about track events when he
subsequently took over the track teams
but he started winning state titles
right away
as a coach he did not take an
authoritarian stance to put it mildly
I don't believe he ever took attendance
why bother
attendance was not required he never
said he had to be there
he established an atmosphere that made
me want to do that
he never made athletes do the work he
made them want to do the work what a
difference
it wasn't possible to rebel against the
requirements of team membership or the
demands of the coach because there
weren't any
he gave people a whole lot of leeway and
encouraged an atmosphere in which every
kid
felt he could be himself and achieve
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respect for
first from the coach and by extension
from his teammates
he was a master at reading an individual
and figuring out what he was in it for
and this applied to the adult world as
well as the track team
in later years when he was dealing with
the broader spectrum than sports
people often came to him asking for
something
his first inclination was to see to it
that they got it
that couldn't be done he tried to
persuade them that they really didn't
want
that failed he convinced them that they
already had it
it didn't often need to go further than
just looking at my watch here and uh huh
I could go on by the way I ought to warn
you
if you have an interest in this book
I’ll tell you for one thing
it's not out there on the bookshelves at
the
at the bookstores which aren't open
anyway uh
I believe it's still available on Amazon
if you want to get a copy that's the
place to go
um most of the second half of the book
I enter high school I enter Lawrence
high school
as a freshman about midway through the
book
and to be honest with you from then on
the narrative is very heavy on the track
the book's about me and
track was very important to me all
through high school I was extremely
dedicated and
it was my main focus so of course the
book is
the second half the book is full of
24
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track stuff
um I find a lot of my
memories of track some some pathos
some sorrow some joys some
humor so you know the narrative
continues but
a lot of it's about traffic be warned
but I also cover mentioned
I mean Cuban Missile Crisis
uh assassination of JFK uh
you know just the
you know nuclear test bans
um all the cultural and
world world impact
events that were going on that I recall
a lot of them are in here because I’m
not just talking about because these
things
affected me these things gave me
something to think about
and to wonder about so it goes into my
book
there's one here that we can
finish up with it has nothing to do with
postcards
very little to do with Falmouth um I
have a pretty long
uh section here about being a paperboy
delivering the Falmouth Enterprise to my
customers
but I closed it off with there was a
curious little advertisement that
regularly appeared in the quiet corner
of the enterprise
it read as follows are you having a
problem with alcohol
do you want to do something about it
call KIA
ding ding ding ding that was it
I wasn't sure what to make of it and
apparently worldlier minds than mine
weren't even
the New Yorker frequently lifted
published items or quotations that were
considered so
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#falmouthenterprise
#newyorker
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peculiar or amusing that they merited
reprinting as space fillers at the end
of an article
in that venerable weekly
one day I ran across that familiar item
from the Enterprise
while leafing through the magazine in
search of humor
the notion of admitting to having a
problem with alcohol
and deciding to do something about it
was a laughing matter
to the editors of the New Yorker
it's it's funny we we talk about history
we talk about events of the past and
very often it's just little items like
that that you'd hardly
hardly ever think of that
really highlight major cultural changes
from one generation to another from one
decade to another
and here back in back in 1960
uh the idea of
wanting to do something about drinking
too much it was just
who would do that but there it was
so I’m going to call myself done here I
uh boy I could keep going through this
it's worth writing a book if for no
other reason than that
you'll love every word I can go back and
reread this
every month for the rest of my life and
still enjoy it
I wish I could do that with other books
but I can't I’m gonna
um close with a little bit of um
a little bit of an observation that was
originally uh it was past
passed to me by my brother Eric
um and I think this
might warm the cockles of the heart of
any librarian anywhere
long after the clown has been hacked to
death and our tweets and blogs and
26
#ericturkington
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postings and e-titles have vanished in
obsolescence
we'll still have the books
thank you if you have any questions I
should have mentioned this earlier if
you have any
questions or comments you'd like to make
please I think you're in contact with
Jill
she will be in contact she is in contact
with me
and uh let her know
thanks for joining in thank you so much
tom that was
great and so many great so many really
delightful stories um if anybody does
have a question that they'd like to ask
Tom
right now or a comment you can just open
up your chat
and I will read him the question if you
have something
um I want to also mention that I loved
hearing the bit
again about Clinton Avenue because I
think about Clinton Avenue all the time
and how it just
ends and then picks up in Falmouth
heights and how I would love to have
like we should do something to make them
connect again
you know a bridge a bridge or we should
have little
boats to go across there or something
seems like it must have been such a
different town
when Clinton Ave went right through and
that the people who live downtown
had would have had such great access to
the Falmouth
Heights beaches so except they would
have had to go up Scranton Avenue and
nobody went upstairs
for any reason that too is really
fascinating that Scranton Avenue
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it was you know just not there was a
place that wasn't there
and the the stuff about the grocery
stores is great I mean
it's just so delightful to hear about
what the town was like at that moment in
time
um and we're actually the the fellow
that's going to be talking tomorrow as
part of this series
um Gus Widmayer um has written a book
called the Belvidere
Plain Revisited and he talks
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also about Clinton Ave and how things
again
sort of developed and it will be very
interesting I think to hear that talk
as well it does not look like anybody
has
any questions at this moment in time
but I am uh really delighted
to have had you finally come to the
library if only virtually
I hope next time in your when you're in
found with you stop by the library and
say hello
we reopened the public yesterday so feel
free
to stop by um it was a real pleasure
uh to have you talk about your memories
of Falmouth
and a great addition um to this series
of talks that we're doing
so and thank to all of you that um have
shown up today for this we really
appreciate it um
and thank you to FCTV for making this
all possible
um in terms of making this this
tv part the work the um
it is again our first time doing quite
something quite of this level so
28
Available from Falmouth Public
Library under REF LocHist 974.492
WID
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we really look forward to it a pleasure
tom
to uh hear you talk and I
hope that you all will take a look at
his book and which of course the library
has copies of
as well as um the postcard collections
so thanks so much well thank you thank
you Jill so sorry to have uh
put you on edge at 9 55 this morning
when I wasn't
down but uh I it worked out fine and uh
this is fun for me too that's great it
and it did indeed work out we're we're
delighted
thank you again and um we hope some of
us who
join you to that some of us some of you
here will be able to join tomorrow
for Gus Widmayer’s talk um and then
we have a third uh story third
one coming up um on Thursday which is
Mary L. Martin who is actually
the author and owner of the world's
largest postcard shop that has just come
out
with a new book about collecting
postcards in fact she's written many
many books about collecting postcards
so that will be sort of a different
angle of this week is the postcards
angle
um thank you so much for attending thank
you Tom
checking out thanks Jill
[Music]
29
�
Text
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Title
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Transcript of Thomas Turkington's Zoom Presentation on Before I Forget: A Boyhood of Little Drama
1869
1949
1953
A&P
author talk
Barnstable County Fair
Beebe
Beebe Woods
Clinton Avenue
Deacon's Pond
Earl Mills
Eric Turkington
Fairview Avenue
Falmouth Chamber of Commerce
Falmouth Enterprise
Falmouth Harbor
Falmouth Heights
Falmouth High School
Falmouth Main Street
Falmouth Plaza
Falmouth Public Library
Falmouth Town Hall
Gifford Street
Greengate
Highfield Hall
James Kalperis
jj newberry's
jones road
katharine lee bates road
lawrence academy
lawrence high school
lawrence junior high school
lilly
marvin circle
mill road
morse pond school
mullen hall school
national stores
new yorker
Old Stone Dock
ortin's photo supply
palmer avenue
panis
peg noonan park
Postcards from Falmouth
punchbowl
queen street
rexall
sandbar
scranton avenue
shining sea bikeway
shiverick's pond
Shore Street
shubael lawrence
sippewissett road
ss pierce
stop and shop
Surf Drive
surf drive beach
tanglewood
tom turkington
transcript
vineyard sound
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/32209/archive/files/e90803d9615b949938f20efee1b39c40.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=v209L210B2zQ3lQxoMfp0VVJqONmyDLV-AsaW0M9pGymcpMST-MToHNGwNOnQXxnvU-svRGvBqOvZhhog1BV3A-5jtqWlbukP6Pr3QXK50u2%7EEsabqq2TjX7l0Rol8S-lKmTv%7EsGo-vw4MqipBU9ZfOCJ7T-SbLgPA4uBbGw81KKV67YpamWzR0JcOdJV3pT4cX4z5O0001KXiBXsRxjVWsEN5D%7EJZsBkP3NrOeeJfGxXDj2LU8zARa28xoGtKLI4pZ54mBN54SKk6MzLOPne9YXeIQyA9um9EmgHaGOnQCuPzHLld%7Eo0uZP2rBRwY9WuI0UUooZx2fuxw99XtlKFg__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
42328b30a144368d49163c4225892f5c
PDF Text
Text
Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
Postcards from Falmouth Oral History Transcript
Recorded: February 24, 2020
Oral Historian: Reverend Will Mebane, Jr.
Interviewer: Troy Clarkson
Topic: Saint Barnabas Church
Note: The right column references postcards by identifiers searchable in the Digital
Commonwealth online collection.
00:00
[Music]
00:45
so
00:45
welcome and my first question is I’d
00:48
like to begin by asking you to tell us
00:49
your full name and the postcard you will
00:51
be discussing
00:53
so I am the Reverend Will Mebane the
rector
00:56
at Saint Barnabas
#saintbarnabaschurch
Gunning_Village_Bldg_0316 through
0343
00:57
Memorial Episcopal Church here in
00:59
Falmouth and I’ll be talk
01:01
talking about the postcard that has the
01:04
structure the building of Saint Barnabas
01:07
Church and so
01:10
Saint Barnabas church has a rich history
01:13
in this community
01:14
uh the cornerstones were laid uh
01:18
many many years ago that's right uh by
1
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
01:21
uh people with a name that still
01:24
resonates throughout our community
01:26
so tell us a little bit about that so
01:28
there is no Saint Barnabas without the
01:30
Beebe family and so that name does
01:33
resonate
01:34
throughout the community and to this day
01:37
the cornerstone was
01:38
laid in 1890 it was a memorial
01:42
to the Beebe family the mother and father
01:47
of the family
01:48
by their eldest surviving son Edward
01:51
Pierson Beebe
01:53
the origin of the parish is
01:58
somewhat interesting in that the Beebes
02:01
were not
02:02
originally Episcopalians they were like
02:04
most folks in New England at the time
02:07
Congregationalists but they used to
02:08
summer in
02:11
Woods Hole and the Church of the
Messiah
#beebe
#1890
#woodshole #churchofthemessiah
Gunning_WoodsHole_Bldg_0565
through 0569
02:14
in Woods Hole is the first Episcopal
church
02:16
in town
02:18
and they used to make the trek down to
2
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
02:20
Woods Hole from Falmouth
02:22
from the Village Green where they stayed
#falmouthvillagegreen
Gunning_Village_Sts_0053 through
0078
02:24
at an inn
02:25
for services on Sunday but that got to
02:28
be
02:29
old pretty quickly and the
02:32
the family decided that they would
02:34
prefer not to have to make that foul
02:36
five mile trek down to uh to Woods Hole
02:41
and one of their own parish now
02:44
parenthetically lots of people in
02:46
Falmouth say to me today
02:48
Woods Hole is so far but can you imagine
02:52
how far it was back in 1888
02:55
having to use a buggy and carriage of
02:57
horses to get down there
03:00
but the Beebe children decided to
03:04
when the James Madison Beebe died
03:07
the Beebe children wanted to build the
03:10
parish
03:10
in memory of their mother Esther and
03:13
their father James
03:16
that's great and so and from that point
03:18
uh
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�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
03:20
there uh there is a long history of the
03:23
development of
03:24
the uh the the church itself uh and of
03:28
continuing generations
03:30
uh of of babies and
03:33
uh and and other prominent members of
03:35
the community supporting not only the
03:37
building but the congregation itself
03:39
so there's uh another interesting
03:42
bit about the formation of
03:46
Saint Barnabas parish originally
03:50
the as I said the family was worshiping
03:53
in Woods Hole
03:55
and then they began to have the
03:58
pastor from Woods Hole do services at
04:02
the
04:02
town
04:05
town hall Falmouth Town Hall on Sunday
04:08
afternoons
04:10
and from that they decided to
04:13
want to build their own parish but the
04:16
in order to build a parish
04:18
or to start a parish in a community
04:22
you cannot do so if there is another
04:24
Episcopal church within the same
04:26
boundary
4
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
04:28
not without getting approval from the
04:29
standing committee
04:31
of the diocese of Massachusetts and that
04:33
was the case here
04:35
and when the petition was put forth
04:38
to start a parish in Falmouth
04:43
the Falmouth village and it was not
04:47
received enthusiastically by the diocese
04:50
and in fact the
04:51
president of the standing committee
04:54
argued very forcefully against
04:58
authorizing the formation of this parish
05:01
and approval from the standing committee
05:03
is necessary
05:05
to get a new parish started so already
05:08
in the beginning you have the president
05:09
of the standing committee saying no
05:10
to this idea because he felt that
05:14
the Beebes were really trying to form a
05:18
parish that was basically for their
05:21
benefit only
05:22
or primarily in fact the Sunday
05:24
afternoon worship services
05:26
were attended primarily by the Beebes
their
05:28
family members and their guests
5
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
05:30
and maybe a few people from the village
05:34
so there was a um a struggle with the
05:38
standing committee and the Beebes to get
05:41
the church built
05:42
but ultimately the Rev. Phillips Brooks
05:46
who was at that time the rector of
05:49
Trinity Church Boston
05:51
very influential church then and now
05:54
uh sided with the Beebes that he thought
it
05:58
would be worthwhile to have a parish in
06:00
Falmouth village
06:01
and that really turned the tide turn the
06:03
opposition
06:05
and allow for the construction of Saint
06:08
Barnabas
06:10
the cornerstone was laid on the 11th of
06:13
June in 1890
06:16
on Saint Barnabas Day
06:20
now there's doubt and
06:23
about why are there questions about
06:26
why that particular day was chosen what
06:30
was significant about
06:31
Saint Barnabas and the only thing
06:35
that anyone has been able to discover
06:38
today
#phillipsbrooks
#trinitychurch #boston
6
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
06:39
is that there was probably or may have
06:42
been
06:42
a family member with the name Barnabas
06:45
in the Beebe family and that is one of
06:48
the reasons they chose
06:50
the name Barnabas for the parish
06:54
very interesting wow so of course
07:01
somewhere contemporaneous with that
the
07:03
Beebes also constructed
07:05
and had then two beautiful
07:09
summer uh estates up on the hill yes
07:12
that we now know today is Highfield Hall
07:14
and the other
07:15
uh is no longer there right that was
07:17
Tanglewood
07:18
right yeah yeah yeah so
07:22
and they had acreage
07:25
that now was known as Beebe Woods
right and
07:27
so the uh
07:28
the everlasting influence of that family
07:31
is as you said very much still felt
07:33
today yeah very prominent
07:34
even today I think it was 95 acres if I
07:36
remember correctly
07:39
so since that time that the cornerstone
#highfieldhall
#tanglewood
#beebewoods
7
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
07:41
was laid
07:42
both the building and the congregation
07:45
that is gathered there has seen
07:47
quite an evolution can you walk us
07:49
through that a little bit
07:50
sure let me do that but I want to first
07:53
talk a little bit about the
07:55
architecture because that's what people
07:57
are going to see on the postcard
08:00
and so it was designed by Henry Vaughan
#henryvaughan
08:05
known as the mentor for the Gothic
#gothic
08:08
revival
08:09
movement in America he himself
08:12
was an Englishman and the Beebes
08:15
found him and from their connections in
08:18
England and got him to come over
08:22
and to design the the building
08:25
made out of a red sandstone and
08:29
that style for Saint Barnabas
08:33
was the first in a series of nine
08:36
churches nine parishes that Vaughan
08:39
designed
08:40
three of them in southern New England
08:43
there's one in Swansea and
08:47
one in New Bedford and then Saint
08:49
Barnabas and the other
8
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
08:51
six are outside of southern New England
08:55
Vaughan was well respected but it said
08:58
that
09:00
he was not interested in fame or
09:03
influence how well you did your work
was
09:06
more important to him
09:08
so the building has survived very well
09:12
thanks to Vaughan's design
09:16
and we still today get hundreds if not
09:19
thousands of people visiting Saint
09:21
Barnabas to admire the the beauty
09:24
of the structure
09:27
Historically Saint Barnabas has been a
09:30
community parish by that I mean a
09:34
place that was open to the community
09:37
to organizations uh non-profits and the
09:41
like
09:42
to together and to
09:46
hash out their strategic agendas
09:50
and so we today do the same thing at
Saint
09:52
Barnabas
09:53
we like to be known as the parish of the
09:56
community
09:57
so we are constantly opening our doors
10:00
and welcoming
9
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
10:02
non-profit organizations and other
10:03
entities
10:05
to use our beautiful campus as a
10:07
gathering for
10:09
retreats and for organizational meetings
10:12
and for community meetings of all types
10:17
and so that legacy continues today
10:21
that that's wonderful uh
10:24
to go back to the architecture for just
10:26
a minute the
10:28
architecture itself and the style it
10:30
really draws a very nice contrast
10:32
to the other more traditional New
10:35
England
10:36
buildings including the the
10:38
Congregational Church across the green
#firstcongregationalchurch
Hunt_Village_Bldg_001
Hunt_Village_Sts_152
Gunning_Village_Sts_0073
Gunning_Village_Bldg_0346 through
0365
10:41
and to me that symbolizes
10:45
what I call the mosaic of the community
10:48
because
10:49
all of the buildings around the green
10:50
are shining tiles in that mosaic
10:53
but Saint Barnabas in particular I think
10
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
10:56
draws
10:57
uh our attention to the fact that
11:01
a church can look differently but still
11:03
be very much part of the community
11:05
you raised an interesting point about of
11:08
the history
11:10
of Saint Barnabas with the
11:11
Congregational Church 19th century now
11:16
and Congregationalists and the
11:20
Episcopalians didn't play well
11:22
together and
11:25
in fact there's a story that has been
11:27
verified that when
11:29
Saint Barnabas was finally being built
11:33
the spire and the tower
11:37
fell during the construction
11:40
during a autumn storm
11:44
and a member of the Congregational
11:46
Church
11:48
remarked I am so glad that is exactly
11:51
what I’ve been praying for
11:56
and it took several uh
12:00
years before the Congregationalists and
12:03
the Episcopalians began to play well
12:05
together
12:06
uh fortunately the pastor at the First
11
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
12:10
Congregation and I
12:11
see one another a lot and we're very
12:13
involved in lots of the same
12:15
projects and causes around town
12:18
but yeah they didn't start out that way
12:22
but today both stand as pillars not only
12:25
of the
12:26
faith community but of the larger
12:27
community and one of the
12:29
the themes that's emerging during these
12:31
uh interviews
12:33
the topic is the postcards but really
12:36
what's developing is a sense of how
12:38
incredibly connected our communities are
12:42
and in many ways through
12:44
our faith communities yes Falmouth I
12:47
think someone told me there's something
12:48
like 27
12:51
faith communities in and around the
12:53
Falmouth area
12:55
which is a large number
12:58
and very diverse and we also
13:02
have a Saint Barnabas has also had a
13:04
very
13:07
positive and cooperative relationship
13:10
with the Falmouth Jewish Congregation
12
#falmouthjewishcongregation
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
13:12
for example there was a time in their
13:14
history
13:15
when they needed a place to worship
13:18
and Saint Barnabas made its chapel space
13:22
available
13:23
for that congregation to worship and
13:26
in the spirit of recognizing that we are
13:29
one people under
13:30
God and we should be being good
13:33
neighbors
13:34
to one another my concern today
13:37
is for
13:41
obviously the future of Saint Barnabas
13:43
as well
13:45
and I have concern about the climate
13:48
crisis
13:48
in which we're we find ourselves today
13:53
it's been forecast that in within the
13:56
next 50 years
13:58
that what we now know as Surf Drive in
#surfdrive
Gunning_Village_Sts_0085
14:01
Falmouth
14:02
will be at the front steps of Saint
14:05
Barnabas
14:07
that's difficult for us to wrap our
14:10
heads around
13
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
14:12
and but that is what the scientists are
14:15
projecting and we have great scientists
14:17
in this area
14:18
and so what does that mean for First
14:22
Congregational Church
14:23
on the Green there and for Saint
14:25
Barnabas on the Green there
14:27
so it's not something
14:30
anyone probably ever thought they would
14:32
have to worry about but there is
14:33
something now that is a concern of ours
14:37
if there is a silver lining in that
14:40
cloud as the communities in Falmouth
14:43
have
14:44
that history that you referenced of
14:45
working together
14:47
and helping each other out so uh
14:50
being the eternal optimist that I am we
14:53
see opportunities in the future
14:55
yeah for uh for the faith communities to
14:58
once again
14:59
uh work together to ensure that there's
15:01
a there's always a place to gather
15:05
since I’ve been here I’ve been here just
15:06
over a year and a half now
15:08
and I’m grateful to my clergy colleagues
14
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
15:12
from the other denominations and faith
15:14
traditions and
15:15
the reenergizing of the Falmouth Clergy
15:19
Association
15:21
of which I’m an active member myself
15:24
because we do need to have that
15:25
collaborative relationship uh because we
15:28
never know when we might need one
15:30
another for
15:32
any number of reasons is there anything
15:35
we didn't cover that you'd like to
15:36
discuss
15:38
just take a look here this will be
15:41
edited yep
15:42
yep
15:47
there is one story I would love to tell
15:49
but I don't know that it's
15:51
true so I’ll share with you
15:54
not for uh insert uh
15:58
that Mrs. Beebe uh
16:02
not only did they get tired of going to
16:04
Woods Hole
16:05
to Church of the Messiah but she is said
16:08
to have said
16:10
that she got tired of her
16:13
petticoats getting dusty on the ride
15
#falmouthclergyassociation
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
16:15
down two weeks old
16:17
and that was the determining factor
16:22
I would love to find out if that's true
16:23
I haven't found that any
16:25
anything I’ve ever seen so far no there
16:27
was no painting back then
16:29
right oh okay yeah did you imagine yeah
16:31
I mean that was
16:32
that was an effort uh let's see
16:37
we talked about that
16:45
yeah so this is going to be three
16:46
minutes so I think you may have enough
16:50
Kim has anything that you oh great idea
16:54
what's that we'll talk about Strawberry
16:57
Festival
16:58
oh yes yes yes yes one of the
17:01
I would say iconic uh
17:04
event that connects Saint Barnabas to
17:06
members of the community who may not
17:08
gather there in worship
17:09
is the Strawberry Festival which uh
17:12
which brings together the
17:13
agrarian history of our community uh
17:16
with
17:17
the parish of Saint Barnabas so tell us
17:20
a little bit about that
16
#strawberryfestival
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
17:21
yeah so the Strawberry Festival uh is
17:24
indeed a seminal event each year
17:26
in the life of Saint Barnabas people
17:29
come from near and far
17:31
for this they they look forward to it
17:33
each year
17:35
we just celebrated our 90th Strawberry
17:38
Festival
17:40
uh let me check I need to check that
17:41
that may not be right and
17:43
because we have so many it was the 90th
17:46
it was the 90th of the Christmas Fair
17:49
not the Strawberry Festival
17:50
Strawberry Festival has actually been
17:52
going on longer than that
17:53
I can't remember the exact it's a
17:56
hundred and
17:56
some years but the Strawberry Festival
18:00
at Saint
18:01
Barnabas brings the community together
18:03
and what I’m most proud of
18:05
today is that a
18:08
significant portion of the funds raised
18:12
from the Strawberry Festival
18:13
go back into the community a
18:17
conscious intentional decision
17
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
18:20
has been made by the parish that if the
18:22
community is going to support an event
18:24
like the Strawberry Festival
18:26
the proceeds from that should go back
18:29
out in the community
18:30
to support the needs of the community
18:33
so it has had a very long history there
18:36
have been times when
18:38
there have been there's been concern
18:40
about whether
18:42
they could pull it off but somehow
18:45
miraculously
18:46
it continues and some individuals have
18:49
been doing
18:50
that organizing for
18:54
decades that's great and then
18:57
the uh
19:01
are the strawberries locally sourced do
19:02
they come from
19:04
there was a time when they all came from
19:09
farms farms in the area and people would
19:11
go out
19:12
members of the congregation would go
out
19:14
and do the picking
19:16
and I think we've had to
18
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
19:20
upgrade to more contemporary means for
19:23
gathering
19:24
the strawberries now because of course
19:26
I’m guessing
19:27
uh more than a hundred years ago when
19:28
the Strawberry Festival started
19:31
a good portion of the land any East
19:33
Falmouth
19:34
particularly Davisville where I grew up
19:36
were strawberry farms yes yes
19:38
yes yes and Tony Andrews is probably the #tonyandrewsfarm
19:41
only
19:41
working strawberry farm left and that
19:45
is where most if not all of the
19:48
strawberries for the Strawberry Festival
19:50
uh are sourced
19:53
yeah that's one that's right yeah
19:56
great well thank you very much for
19:59
spending this time with us
20:00
and sharing the rich history of Saint
Barnabas Troy
20:03
always a pleasure to be with you I’m so
20:05
grateful to the Falmouth Public Library
20:07
for this series and I look forward to
20:09
learning more about Falmouth’s rich and
20:13
great history
19
#davisville
�Falmouth Public Library – Postcards from Falmouth
20:34
[Music]
20
�
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Title
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Transcript of Reverend William Mebane's Oral History on St. Barnabas Church
1890
Beebe
Beebe Woods
Boston
Church of the Messiah
Davisville
Falmouth Clergy Association
Falmouth Jewish Congregation
Falmouth Village Green
First Congregational Church
Gothic
Henry Vaughan
Highfield Hall
oral history
phillips brooks
Postcards from Falmouth
saint barnabas church
strawberry festival
Surf Drive
tanglewood
tony andrews farm
transcript
trinity church
troy clarkson
william mebane
Woods Hole