Tuesday, March 14, 2017
#Folklorephoto Is there something wrong with this picture? How do you open a can of Carnation milk?
At our recent Tea Bun Workshop, a can of Carnation milk was opened like this, to the shock of many participants. How do you open a tin of evaporated milk?
Monday, March 13, 2017
#CollectiveMemories Monday - The Childhood of Janet Story
Janet Story was born in 1924 and grew up in St. John's, NL. The interview begins with her providing background information about herself and her family, and then reminiscing about the children's game "Hoist your Sails and Run", ice skating, hockey, tube skates, street cars on Water Street, attending Holloway's School, playing marbles in the spring and sliding in the winter, and summer activities such as swimming and catching tadpoles.
Janet also shares her memories of being a young girl in St. John's during WWII, the blackouts of the 1940s and the Air Raid Precaution Group, playing field hockey and basketball as a teenager, and other memories of her early life.
Janet passed away three months after our recording session, but the full interview is available on Memorial University's Digital Archive Initiative.
You can listen to more of Janet's memories of her life in sports here.
Friday, March 10, 2017
Living Heritage Podcast Ep069 Building Boats and Building Community
Jim Dempsey is the President of the Wooden Boat Museum of Newfoundland and Labrador. Jim has been around boats and the ocean all of his life. As a boy, he spent his summers on the beach where he always had a boat to row. After studying marine biology and oceanography at university, he was fortunate to be employed in his field for over forty years. He has worked along the entire British Columbia coast, in the Canadian Arctic, and from Sable Island to Hudson's Bay on the east coast. For Jim, the Wooden Boat Museum has provided a chance to realize a dream to build wooden boats. This experience has been enhanced by the people he has met, the places he has visited, and the stories he has heard. In this interview we talk all about the wooden boat museum, their past conferences, the work of conserving boatbuilding skills, and their current educational and outreach programs.
Listen on the Digital Archive:
http://collections.mun.ca/cdm/singleitem/collection/ich_oral/id/706/rec/1
Listen on the Digital Archive:
http://collections.mun.ca/cdm/singleitem/collection/ich_oral/id/706/rec/1
Wednesday, March 8, 2017
Spencer Birch Brooms - The next generation! #nlheritage
I posted yesterday about the birch brooms of Samuel R. Spencer, Cul de Sac West. In a great example of how the internet can be a good thing at times, I got an email today from Mike Spencer, the grandson of Samuel Spencer. Mike is the first cousin of Janet Edmonds, who showed me her grandfather's broom.
Mike wrote, "he taught me how to make the birch brooms when I was a teenager and I have made a few over the years. I interviewed my grandmother about them when I was doing my degree at Grenfell, they used the brooms as a tool for processing salt fish."
I had mentioned in the blog post about his grandfather's broom that it was tied off with wire, instead of the cord used by broom maker Joshua Young. Mike noted that, "Pop didn't always use wire on his brooms, I think it was more about what he had on on hand," which fits with Janet's description of him as a bit of a tinkerer.
Mike also sent me a couple photos (shown here) of a broom he made in 2016.
Stay tuned, I'm sure there will be more broom posts sweeping your way soon! In the meantime, if you have a birch broom or a story about one, email me at ich@heritagefoundation.ca.
- Dale Jarvis
Merchants and Memories of Main Street, Windsor - Booklet Launch
Some of the people interviewed for the booklet, members of the Grand Falls-Windsor Heritage Society, and Heritage Foundation staff. |
Interviewer Terra Barrett with longtime GFW resident Yvonne Courtney who was interviewed for the booklet. |
Reviewing photographs from the GFWHS. |
The crowd listening to a reading from the booklet. |
Debating who is in the wedding photograph displayed on the banner. |
Former staff of a Main Street shop. I believe this photo is of the Stewart's staff - let us know if the comments if you know for sure! |
Discussing stories of Windsor. |
Anne Warr posing with the Windsor quilt and the Cozy Chat banner which displays the photograph of her parent's wedding in the Cozy Chat. |
Tuesday, March 7, 2017
The birch brooms of Samuel R. Spencer, Cul de Sac West.
One of my current folklore obsessions is the traditional Newfoundland birch broom. I've written about birch brooms on this blog before, and you can read about what a birch broom is (and see a video of Mr. Joshua Young making one) here, and more photos of the process here. If you are so inclined, you can also read an article I wrote called "Street Arabs, Drain Sweepers, and Birch Brooms."
The birch broom picture above belongs to Janet Edmonds of St. John's, and was made by her maternal grandfather, Samuel Robert "Young Sam" Spencer (1920-2001), originally of Cul de Sac West, a now-resettled community just east of Cape la Hune on Newfoundland's south coast.
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Photo of Samuel R. Spencer, courtesy Janet Edmonds. |
A few years before his death, he made a batch of birch brooms for family members and grandchildren, including one for Janet and one for her sister. Janet tells me that he was a bit of a craftsman, and liked to putter around making things, including a long-handled "pooper-scooper" so he wouldn't have to bend over while walking the dog.
Mr. Spencer's birch brooms are very similar in style to those made by Joshua Young, who grew up in Grey River, only a short boat ride (20km or so) from Cul de Sac. The major difference between the two makers is that Spencer's brooms are tied off with wire, rather than the cord used by Young.
Do you have a birch broom with a story? I want to hear it! I'd also love to track down some living birch broom makers. If you have ideas or memories, comment below, or email me at ich@heritagefoundation.ca.
- Dale Jarvis
Monday, March 6, 2017
Booklet launch - "I’m going to tell your mother" Tuesday March 7th
I’m going to tell your mother: An oral history of childhood’s hidden worlds.
Collective Memories Series #004
Booklet Launch
Tuesday, March 7th
7:30pm - Crow's Nest Officers Club
Over a series of sometimes snowy Monday nights in January 2017, a dozen participants gathered at the Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador’s office in St. John’s to learn the basics of oral history.
This extended oral history course was a first for HFNL, and was open to anyone with an interest in local history, culture, and folklore, and who wished to learn more about safeguarding our cultural heritage through the medium of oral histories. We had students and experienced cultural workers, retirees, former journalists, and people passionate about archives and family history.
One of the goals of the course was to have participants work collaboratively to create a finished oral history project. We talked about the importance of focussing a project, and after discussion, we agreed to conduct oral histories on the hidden and secret worlds of young lives, and to collect some of those stories you might not have wanted your parents to know at the time.
Our researchers went out and conducted their own interviews, prepared biographies of their storytellers, and selected memories for publication. On Tuesday, at 7:30pm at the historic Crow's Nest Officers Club, we launch the results of their work with "I’m going to tell your mother: An oral history of childhood’s hidden worlds."
Collective Memories Series #004
Booklet Launch
Tuesday, March 7th
7:30pm - Crow's Nest Officers Club
Over a series of sometimes snowy Monday nights in January 2017, a dozen participants gathered at the Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador’s office in St. John’s to learn the basics of oral history.
This extended oral history course was a first for HFNL, and was open to anyone with an interest in local history, culture, and folklore, and who wished to learn more about safeguarding our cultural heritage through the medium of oral histories. We had students and experienced cultural workers, retirees, former journalists, and people passionate about archives and family history.
One of the goals of the course was to have participants work collaboratively to create a finished oral history project. We talked about the importance of focussing a project, and after discussion, we agreed to conduct oral histories on the hidden and secret worlds of young lives, and to collect some of those stories you might not have wanted your parents to know at the time.
Our researchers went out and conducted their own interviews, prepared biographies of their storytellers, and selected memories for publication. On Tuesday, at 7:30pm at the historic Crow's Nest Officers Club, we launch the results of their work with "I’m going to tell your mother: An oral history of childhood’s hidden worlds."
Come learn some of the secrets uncovered by our researchers!
#CollectiveMemories Monday - Gary Barnes, Leatherworker
In 2012, Nicole Penney and I conducted some research around Newfoundlanders who worked high steel.
One of the intriguing people we met as part of the project was Gary Barnes, a leatherworker and harness maker, who makes leatherwork for those working high steel.
In this interview, Gary Barnes discusses making leather works for high steel such as harnesses, frogs, and belts. Listen to the interview here or visit Gary's website here and check out his work.
Wednesday, March 1, 2017
Calling all youth - 3rd Annual Heritage Tomorrow Forum!
Saturday March 25th
The Lantern, 35 Barnes Road. St John’s, NL
Following the success of the last two forums, the third annual Heritage Tomorrow Forum is again set to engage youth interested in the safeguarding and study of culture and heritage.
Heritage Tomorrow NL and the Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador are holding the 3rd Annual Heritage Tomorrow Forum at the Lantern, 35 Barnes Road on Saturday March 25th from 10am-2pm.
“The main goal of this year’s forum is to bring together young people who are enthusiastic about heritage and culture, and help foster future professional networks,” said Heather Elliott, Heritage Tomorrow organizer.
Participants will again get to take part in a heritage skills competition, now with a whole new range of activities! New this year is the networking lunch, where participants can meet with young professionals in the heritage industry and create contacts with others interested in similar heritage fields. A social will take place in the evening after the forum for those interested.
Young people between the ages of 18-35 can register for $10.00 at: http://www.hfnl.ca/
Heritage Tomorrow NL is a group affiliated with the Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador that works to a create a network for young people and heritage professionals within the province.
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