Over
the years, people in Windham have gotten to know them at fundraisers such as
bake sales, plant sales and craft sales; on history tours and by attending the
group’s historical programs that are presented monthly March through September.
One
of the biggest goals for the Society in 2020 will be to continue the work that
has begun on their Village Green Living History Museum. The project began in
2010 when the Historical Society acquired property and buildings that abutted
the Old Town House Museum on Windham Center Road. Funding for the purchase came
from Society and community members who shared in the vision of using the
additional space to create a late 1800s village where people could learn about
Windham’s past.
There
is one active building on the property now. The Village School provides a
unique living history opportunity to area school children. The one-room building
is typical of many such structures that once dotted Windham’s landscape in its
earlier days. It is set up to look like a classroom in the 1890s, complete with
antique desks, a pot-belly stove, a period flag and portraits of George
Washington and Abraham Lincoln. The schoolmarm or master and the students
themselves dress in period attire for the living history classes and are given
names of children who actually did attend school in old-time Windham. Once the
school bell rings, the students take a step back in time to experience a school
day in 1898 using slates and chalk for writing, McGuffey Readers for reading
and elocution, and quill pens and ink to practice their penmanship.
Over
the past couple of years, other buildings have been added to the Green. Renovations are underway on the old South
Windham Library that was moved from the Little Falls area of the town to the
Society’s Village Green. It will become
a museum dedicated to the village of South Windham with an ell that will be a replica
of South Windham’s railroad station that was once a vibrant part of that
section of town.
Last
year, a blacksmith shop and gazebo for entertaining were constructed on the
property. In 2020, the Society hopes to move the Old Grocery at the corner of
Windham Center Road and Route 202 onto its place on the Green as well. It will
take $41,000 to make the move, and through the generous support of Society
members, $37,500 has been raised so far. If anyone would like to make a
donation to the cause, checks can be sent to the Windham Historical Society, PO
Box 1475, Windham ME 04062.
The
Society is also excited about an archiving project they have been working on in
which five members of the group have been recording details and artifacts to be
placed on the Society’s website. Over 10,000 items have been recorded to date
with many, many more to come. This project will make researching easier and
will help the Society respond more efficiently to inquiries they receive.
With
the 200th Anniversary of Maine’s statehood coming right up, the
Society has put together a lovely 2020 Commemorative Bicentennial Calendar
featuring illustrations by Jerry Black, a Society member. All funds coming from
sales will be put towards Village Green efforts.
Windham’s
Historical Society is not your grandmother’s Historical Society. Its members
are forward-thinking as well as being interested in Windham’s past. They work
together to continue moving the organization into the future while bringing
Windham’s history to life. Most of all,
they show the community the joys you can experience while having fun with
history.
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