June 2, 2009

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North Street Garden

North Street Garden

Circuit Chautauquas, a/k/a culture under tents, were a major national cultural movement across rural America during the early 1900s.  The circuits brought education and entertainment to people who did not have access to them because of poor roads, unreliable cars and the lack of regular radio programming.  Hence, the circuits were the major platform for national politicians, motivational speakers and eventually the theater.  Education and entertainment were mixed together under the signature huge, brown tents that moved across the country ever summer.

Carol McCracken learned about the circuits from her grandfather, who in 1913, founded and managed Redpath Chautauqua of New York and (northern) New England.  He was from western Pennsylvania.  His wife, a Portland native, was employed by him as an operatic singer.  The couple was married in Falmouth Foreside in 1910.  They are buried at Evergreen Cemetery in Portland.

McCracken is offering a four-week course starting Tuesday afternoon, (12: 45 p.m. – 2:45 p.m.) June 16th at Osher Lifelong Learning Institute (formerly Senior College).  Part of the course will involve reinactments of some of the notables on the platform;  Warren G. Harding, James G. Blaine, Ida Tarbell, Charles Dickens, Katherine Ridgeway, etc.  The class will sing some of the favorite songs of the era, directed by Terry Foster, OLLI Singers co-director.  OLLI is located at the new Wishcamper Building on the University of Southern Maine campus on Bedford Street, Room 102 on the first flooor.   (Students must be at least 50 years or older to regiser for class.)  For more information, please call 780-4706 or 1 800 800-4876.  www.usm.maine.edu/olli.  Or please email Carol at ca10cken@aol.com for more specifics.

It promises to be fun and informational – just like the Chautauqua Days – of the 20s.

Leonard W. Cummings At The Abyssinian Meeting House Last Month

Leonard W. Cummings At The Abyssinian Meeting House Last Month

By Carol McCracken

The Abyssinian Meeting House won the lottery last night when the city council voted unanimously to award it $122,000 in CDBG-R funds it had requested to put a new roof on the historic building located at 75 Newbury Street at the bottom of the Hill.

The building was originally built in 1826 and took a few years before it was completed.  It served as part of the Underground Railroad for slaves escaping to Canada, a stable, apartments, etc.  The current board hopes in the future to have it serve as a community center with lectures, art exhibits and much more.  It served as a meetinig place for the community following the devastating fire of  1866 when most of the area burned to the ground.  It was saved when Reuben Ruby, its founder, stood on the rooftop covering it with wet blankets.

“We have a roof,” said a beaming Leonard Cummings, president of the Committee to Restore the Abyssinian Meeting House. Both he and his daughter, Debra, testified in support of the non-profit’s request for funds.  Cummings said the project needs approval from a historic committee and the fire department over the roof material to be used and then – within  days – the restoration work will continue.

The funds voted for this work are part of the Federal Stimulus Package – the Recovery Program.

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