Friday, 30 December 2011

The Connector by Jane Ledwell

This article appears in the January 2012 issue of The Buzz.  http://www.buzzon.com/articles/community/12490-the-connector
THE CONNECTOR
by Jane Ledwell
Profile: Arnold Smith
     With roots in Pleasant Valley that go back to 1780, Arnold Smith can stand on a hill and in one direction see where his father was born; in another, where his mother was born. He can point to the home places of four grandparents, all eight great-grandparents, “and a good part,” he says, of his 16 great-great-grandparents. “When this side married that side, then I was related to everyone,” he chuckles.
     He’s powerfully connected to his heritage—even his home, where he helps care for his parents, is a renovated 1860 house that had been slated for demolition but that he had moved to the “home farm” and painstakingly restored with heritage style. But when Arnold comes down the hill, he is constantly working on projects to actively preserve history and historical objects, to make them available to all.
     “I’m a person who likes to take a few bits of this and a few bits of that… and if you can be a bit clever or a bit creative with it, you can make something out of it,” says Arnold.
     “I’m a terrible person if I go to a museum,” he says. “I always want to learn something. I always want to know, now, how do you make that?” Insatiable curiosity and an eye for detail have led him to learn woodworking, building, cooking, and sewing. “I wanted to be an architect, and I’m still thrilled exploring old buildings—I love that,” Arnold says, “but I don’t have that ability. I’m the one crawling into the corners with a tape measure.”
     Whether he is working on the restoration of Doucet House and Farmers Bank in Rustico, where he helped Carter Jeffery go through buildings “with a magnifying glass to find the details,” locating notches in a beam to provide the exact location and width of the original staircase or the exact hole the chimney went through; making chicken fricot in the fireplace at Doucet house (“It had two key ingredients: woodsmoke and soot,” he laughs.), or recreating dresses from L.M. Montgomery’s wedding trousseau for the anniversary of her marriage, Arnold wants a hands-on role in heritage.
    When he started to study history, Arnold says, “I found my roots in those stories.” The historical displacement of some ancestors—in Highland clearances, French Huguenots escaping discrimination in France or sent to Ireland, United Empire Loyalists dislodged by revolution—gives Arnold true appreciation of connection to place.
     As co-owner of the Bay Vista Motel in Cavendish, he meets many visitors to the Island who are looking for connection, and many have come here as a result of L.M. Montgomery’s writing, which for Arnold is another “window into Island life” and heritage. “When you read Montgomery’s stories, you see your own ancestors in there too,” he says.
     The books get visitors here, but Arnold tries to help them find their passions expressed in Island culture and heritage. “Experiential tourism,” he says, means “getting more than you originally thought you were going to get.”
     Working in tourism in the summer and retail in the winter, with year-round caregiving responsibilities, and fulfilling volunteer roles with the Montgomery Theatre and the Heritage Review Board and more, Arnold says, “I’d have to live to 150 to do everything I want to do.” He hopes to take after forebears of whom it was said, “They’re too stubborn to die, and poison agrees with them.”
     Arnold reflects on the need to preserve Island agricultural heritage and eat local food by saying, “There’s a connectedness to knowing where things come from. When I grew up on the farm, when it was time for supper I knew this was the red heifer or the brown steer or the spotted pig or something we had given a Christian name to.” But his search for connection relates to more than food—or clothing or buildings, for that matter.
     “There’s always a way to connect,” he smiles, summing up an inclusive and hands-on vision of heritage that hand-crafts joy and appreciation in the present.

Tuesday, 1 November 2011

Fox Hunt in Pleasant Valley, PEI

On Saturday, October 22nd the PEI Fox Hunt Club held their fall hunt on our farm in Pleasant Valley.  They assembled below our house in the front field.  My niece Tammy and I served Port, Sherry and pound cake before the hunt.   
Tammy is wearing a green plaid dress /w hoop we created this dress a few years ago - it's one of our favourites.
Below:  our house was built about a mile away on the main highway in 1864.  In 1999 I saved the house from destruction, moved it to our family farm and restored it, adding the sunroom, porch and garage.  This house was built by my great-great-grandparents Robert & Jane (Jeffery) Sharpe and called it Pleasant Hill Farm.
No fox (or any other animal) was harmed in this hunt - a drag with scent was used to mark the hunt trail.
By mid afternoon the hunt was finished and a potluck followed in our family room.


Tuesday, 6 September 2011

My portrayal of a Father of Confederation

In the summer of 1989, the 125th Anniversary of the meeting of the Fathers of Confederation, I portrayed the youngest Father, Andrew Archibald MacDonald.
Above/Below:  Here I am photographed at Province House in the chamber where the Father's of Confederation met in September 1864.  That beard is real!
This costume was specially made for me.
Below:  My sister Nancy and I at the Ardgowan Garden Party.  I made this gold dress as well as the outfit I was wearing. 
Below:  Here's a photo of Ardgowan from this website. See http://www.pc.gc.ca/apprendre-learn/prof/itm2-crp-trc/htm/nardgowan_e.asp
Ardgowan National Historic Site of Canada
Below:  Here I am with Orlo Jones at the same Garden Party.  Orlo was the genealogist at the PEI Museum & Heritage Foundation where I often volunteered.

Monday, 22 August 2011

1st Anne of Green Gables Parade, Cavendish

     We didn't have an Anne of Green Gables Parade this year, however, I'm posting some photos from the first parade we held on a sunny summer's day.
     I was asked to bring together 12 period costumes for The Ladies of Avonlea portrayed by ladies from the Red Hat Society, Kensington Branch.  Also we made costumes for pirates worn by a half dozen young men and women.  As if we didn't already have enough to do we topped it off by designing and building a float depicting L.M. Montgomery in her Cavendish Home looking out over the countryside of Cavendish.
     Here's a variety of photos from the parade.
Above:  here Lucille and I put the finishing touches to the LMM float - three other friends, David, Anne and Carter are working hard on the other side.
Above:  the float is ready to go - we were up half the night painting the lettering on the cloths.
Above:  we made costumes for the young people depicting pirates.  Yes, pirates visited Cavendish in the 1800's.
Above: the horse and carriage with local residents in costume is ready to go.
The parade starts with a banner and children of Cavendish in costume tossing candy into the crowd.
The children's costumes were by others.
Below: school themed float - costumes by others.
 Below: ladies on horseback wearing our costumes.
 Our pirates are of the friendly nature :-)
 Below:  here I am on the left with the banner in advance of our float.
"Were it not for those Cavendish years I do not think Anne of Green Gables would ever have been written." - L.M.M.
Below:  we also made this sign from a couple sheets of plywood - Carter plotted the design and we glued it on.
"What a small big world it is" Over 50 million copies of Anne of Green Gables around the world.
Below: the Ladies of Avonlea (aka Red Hat Society ladies) wearing our period costumes suited to the times of Anne of Green Gables.
Not all the ladies wore period shoes - their parade walk was near 2 miles.
  The End!

Saturday, 13 August 2011

An Anniversary for Romantics

Many thanks to The Montgomery Theatre for including an article on the Trousseau Project in this Summer's Playbill.  Below is a scan of the article and some information about the theatre.
For more information on the threatre go to:  http://www.themontgomerytheatre.com/