Posted By The Curator

 

With Rural Heritage Day over and the fair around the corner, summer is winding down fast. Things at the Baldwin-Reynolds House are anything but quiet this time of year. There are plenty of ways to see or get involved at the museum in the upcoming weeks, as well as throughout the fall.
 
Although Rural Heritage Day is over, there are still summer exhibits throughout the museum. Quilts and coverlets are prominently displayed in several rooms as well as exhibits on the Crawford County Fair and the once famous Shadeland Stock Farm near Springboro, PA. Throughout the latter half of the 1800s, the Powell Brothers raised Clydesdales of which were sold worldwide. Photos, advertising, and the Powell’s traveling trunk are just of a few of the artifacts you can still see in this exhibit.
 
Oil is still on the brain at The Baldwin-Reynolds House Museum as well and next on the list of demonstrations is being presented by none other than your friendly neighborhood museum curator! Keep an eye out in next week’s article for a more complete description.
 
The museum and the historical society will, as always, have displays at the Crawford County Fair in just another week or two. Be sure to stop in the Grange Building to see the museum’s display and the building next door to see historical society displays, books for sale, and much more!
 
In addition to several more programs on oil, we will have the George Delemater carriage as a float in the Oil 150 Parade! We are still looking for someone who has horses that is willing to pull our carriage through Titusville, but are looking to put it on a float if necessary.
 

Much more is planned as we enter fall. Be sure to keep reading for art shows, Haloween Tours, and much more! See you at the museum!


 
Posted By The Curator
What do Barbados, a dead fox, salt water, angry hunters, wax, tradition and subterranean furry creatures have in common?   Our free presentation on Wednesday, July 8th at 7pm will answer this riddle by exploring one of the best examples of the genius of the American Common Law system---the work of the Pennsylvania courts in developing new law to accommodate the birth of the oil industry.   The discussion will focus primarily on four of the earliest oil cases to challenge Pennsylvania courts and will explore the jurisprudential impact those cases have had upon American law.

 

 

 
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