Tuesday, November 29, 2016
#FolklorePhoto: Windsor Taxis and Buses
This photo is one of the images from the Heritage Society which will be featured in an upcoming booklet on the merchants of Main Street based on oral history interviews completed in Windsor in September. Tomorrow afternoon we are meeting with the Heritage Society to discuss a pop up exhibit to go along with launch of the booklet in the coming new year.
The booklet will focus on the merchants from the bigger well known stores such as Cohen's, Riff's, and Stewart's to the buses (or taxis) which lined Main Street and provided transportation between the towns of Windsor and Grand Falls. Several people described the buses which would run between Main Street in Windsor and High Street in Grand Falls and even delivered lunches to the mill workers.
Included below is a short audio clip from Roy Oldford who grew up in Windsor. In this clip Roy talks about the popularity of the buses and also tells a humorous story about using his friend's father's bus to earn a bit of pocket change when they were teenagers.
~Terra Barrett
Thursday, November 24, 2016
Get your long underwear ready! It's a #MummersFestival #Podcast! #FolkloreThursday
In celebration of the return of the Mummers Festival on November 26th, we are rebroadcasting one of our previous podcasts, an interview with Ryan Davis, the mummer-in-charge of the festival!
Ryan Davis has been running the Mummers Festival since 2009. He holds an MA in Folklore and a BA in Communication Studies. It was his interest in festivals, celebrations, and costuming that led him to mummering traditions. The Mummers Festival promotes the continuation and evolution of traditional arts and performance by encouraging active participation in mummering activities. The Mummers Festival helps to keep mummering alive and contemporary and adds to the population’s pride of place.
In this edition of the Living Heritage Podcast, Ryan talks about what mummers are and what they do, the beginnings of the Mummers Festival and how it has grown over seven years, the successes and challenges of running a festival, and what he hopes the festival will offer in the future.
See you at the parade on December 10th!
Listen on the Digital Archive:
Tuesday, November 22, 2016
#Folklorephoto Do you have memories of the Newfoundland Railway?
Friday, November 18, 2016
#CollectiveMemories Booklet Launch - The Story of the Spar: An Oral History of the Hazel Pearl
Left to Right: Roy Hiscock, Ben Hiscock, Minnie Hiscock, Albert Hiscock, and Sarah Hiscock. |
The Story of the Spar: An Oral History of the Hazel Pearl is the second booklet in the Collective Memories Series produced by the Heritage Foundation. This booklet focuses on the Hazel Pearl shipwreck and includes archival research, field recording measurements of the spar, and oral history interview transcripts. The interviews were completed by Terra Barrett and Dale Jarvis, the measurements and drawing of the spar by Michael Philpott and Li Xingpei, background research by Sarah Hannon, and the booklet was edited by Heather Elliott.
As stated in The Sailor’s Word-Book:
Li Xingpei measuring the spar in July 2016. |
The spar which sits outside the Heritage House was once a part of the Hazel Pearl. This spar was part what sparked the interest in the story of the Hazel Pearl and was accidentally brought ashore by fisherman Wayne Freeman when it became tangled in his capelin seine several summers back.
If you want to learn more about the spar or the Hazel Pearl you can head to collections.mun.ca to hear the full interviews or you can check out PDF version of the booklet here!
The Hazel Pearl booklet is part of the foundation’s Collective Memories Project. This project is an initiative of the Intangible Cultural Heritage Office of the Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador, with funding provided by the Department of Children, Seniors, and Social Development. The Collective Memories Project invites seniors to record their stories and memories for sharing.
~Terra Barrett
Reviewing old photographs in the Heritage House. |
Thursday, November 17, 2016
Living Heritage Podcast Ep061 Forgotten Songs of the Newfoundland Outports
Anna Kearney Guigné is an independent folklorist and adjunct professor affiliated with Memorial University of Newfoundland’s ethnomusicology program. An historian at heart, Kearney Guigné has extensively written about twentieth-century folksong collectors and collecting practices. Kearney Guigné also explores the wide range of influences that continue to shape our rich musical tradition including such popular media as newspapers, broadsides, songsters, and radio programs, vinyl recordings.
This November, Anna will release her fourth major publication The Forgotten Songs of the Newfoundland Outports: As Taken from Kenneth Peacock’s Field Collection, 1951-1961. We talk about the life, fieldwork, and legacy of Kenneth Peacock, and the work of selecting songs for publication in this new book.
Listen on the Digital Archive:
http://collections.mun.ca/cdm/singleitem/collection/ich_oral/id/692/rec/1
Listen on the Digital Archive:
http://collections.mun.ca/cdm/singleitem/collection/ich_oral/id/692/rec/1
Take note!
The University of Ottawa Press and the Canadian Museum of History official book launch of
The Forgotten Songs of the Newfoundland Outports
As taken From Kenneth Peacock’s Field Collection, 1951-1961
By Anna Kearney Guigné
Wednesday November 30th from 7:30 to 9:00 pm
MMaP Gallery
Research Centre for Music, Media and Place
Second floor, Arts & Culture Centre, St. John’s, NL
Tuesday, November 15, 2016
#Folklorephoto The cross in St. Cecilia Roman Catholic Cemetery, St. Lawrence
When driving through St. Lawrence a large concrete crucifix can be seen from the road, standing tall among the headstones in St. Cecilia Roman Catholic Cemetery. While we were in St. Lawrence Dale interviewed Thérèse Slaney about her life, and she talked proudly about her husband Herb, an engineer who designed the cross.
The cross in St. Cecilia Roman Catholic Cemetery |
Herb Slaney's technical drawing of the cross |
In the following clip you can listen to Thérèse Slaney talk about the work Herb did on the cross.
Friday, November 11, 2016
#CollectiveMemories Roadtrip to St. Lawrence
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Terra Barrett and Kelly Drover with the material to be digitized! |
Public meeting on oral history projects. |
ThérèseSlaney and Dale Jarvis. |
Reviewing Herb Slaney's plans. |
St. Lawrence's grotto. |
The cross in St. Cecilia Roman Catholic Cemetery. |
Petite Forte |
Thursday, November 10, 2016
Digitizing the Mount Pearl Oral History Project. #collectivememories #oralhistory
Gaze in wonder at our high-tech digitization suite, converting micro-cassette tapes to WAV format recordings!
Our Collective Memories project is embarking on a new partnership with the Admiralty House Communications Museum to digitize its oral history collection, largely collected in the early 2000s. Here, we are digitizing an interview conducted January 16, 2001 with Steve Best, conducted by Lisa Abbott. The interview focuses on Steve's childhood memories of growing up in Gambo and later working for the Newfoundland Railway as a telegrapher. There is some focus as well on his memories of Mount Pearl in the 1970s.
We will be working with the fabulous Carla Watson at the Museum to place the collection online as part of Memorial University's Digital Archives Initiative. Stay tuned!
- Dale
Living Heritage Podcast Ep060 Cousin Silas and The Moose Woman
Elinor has been telling stories for over 25 years . She was inspired by many, including Newfoundland fiddler and storyteller, Emile Benoit, Rita Cox, Bob Barton and Laura Simms. After 22 years as an administrator with the Newfoundland Public Libraries, she left to devote more time to storytelling, working with the “Learning Through the Arts” programme in schools in Western Newfoundland, before moving to Nova Scotia in 2011. Lifetime member, former Administrator, retired Webmaster of Storytellers of Canada/Conteurs du Canada, she received the Storytellers of Canada/Conteurs du Canada “Storykeeper Award” in 2015.
In this podcast, we discuss how Elinor started in storytelling, her new project “Cousin Silas and the Moose Woman”, and the work of Silas Tertius Rand who was a Baptist Missionary and Mi’kmaq story collector. We also discuss several stories Silas collected and published and what the future holds for Elinor’s storytelling projects.
Listen on the Digital Archive:
http://collections.mun.ca/cdm/ref/collection/ich_oral/id/696
Photo: 1880-1887 ca. The Reverend Silas Tertius Rand and two Mi'kmaq boys Amherst, N.S. Photograph: R. S. Pridham
Listen on the Digital Archive:
http://collections.mun.ca/cdm/ref/collection/ich_oral/id/696
Photo: 1880-1887 ca. The Reverend Silas Tertius Rand and two Mi'kmaq boys Amherst, N.S. Photograph: R. S. Pridham
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