Monthly Archives: May 2009

Archon

You may have heard that the Litchfield Historical Society received a grant from the Council on Library and Information Resources for cataloging hidden special collections.  The staff chose the Archon database, an open source archival management system developed by the University of Illinois.  Staff are working to populate the database with finding aids for holdings dating from 1776-1835.  To date, the Benjamin Tallmadge Collection and the Pierce Family Correspondence are complete finding aids.  If you take time to browse the “Collections” module, you’ll see that there are a few others in progress, including the papers of George C. Woodruff, the Litchfield Female Academy Collection, and the Wolcott Family Collection.  You may also notice that there are a few items in “digital content” where we hope to include photos of some of the objects related to the manuscript collections.  Check back for additional content, and let us know if you have any suggestions for improving the site.

Museum acquires two landscapes by Adelaide Deming

Within the short span of only ten days the Historical Society acquired two landscapes by Adelaide Deming.

Adelaide Deming was an artist who lived the majority of her life in Litchfield and was a well regarded and known artist in her time.  She studied at the Art Students League in New York and later with such artists as William Merritt Chase, William Lathrop, Henry Snow and Arthur Dow.  From 1902 to 1910 she was an instructor at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, NY.  She traveled to England, France, and the Virgin Islands as well as the western United States and California to paint.  Adelaide Deming was a member fo the National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors, the Connecticut Academy of Fine Art, and the American Watercolor Society as well as many other state and local artistic associations.

The Litchfield Historical Society has a large collection of Adelaide Deming’s works, many donated to the museum by the artist herself.   This is a facet of the collection, the museum is constantly seeked to expand and enrich with new acquisitions.

The first, an untitled winter scene believed to be of the Litchfield countryside was purchased by the museum from Shannon Fine Art Auctioneers in Milford, CT.   The painting had traveled back to Connecticut from a private owner in Arizona.

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The painting is signed “Adelaide Deming” in the bottom right hand corner.

The second painting was also purchased by the museum but this time the staff did not have to travel quite so far.  One of the staff members happened into Traces Fine Art Gallery in Bantam, CT and spied a small painting by Adelaide Deming.   Upon further investigation, it was discovered the painting was done of a home on North St. in Litchfield known as the Corner House.   Also painted in winter, this small canvas adds to the Society’s collection of known buildings painting by local artists.

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Both works will soon be on display in the Ching Reading Room located on the ground floor of the Litchfield History Museum.  Please feel free to stop by and see this two new acquisitions.

Abraham Lincoln and the Litchfield Law School

It is well known that graduates of the Litchfield Law School figured prominently in national politics during the Civil War era.  Vice President John C. Calhoun was an early proponent of secession.  He may have been influenced by talk of New England secession during his time in Litchfield.    Eugenius Aristedes Nisbet wrote the articles of secession for the state of Georgia.  Earlier still, law school graduates including William Holabird, U.S. Attorney for the District of Connecticut, and Roger Sherman Baldwin participated on the prosecution and defense of the Amistad captors.  Lawyer, minister and humorist  Augustus Baldwin Longstreet was a staunch defender of slavery.

Today, during the course of research for the new Litchfield Female Academy and Litchfield Law School student database announced in our latest newsletter, researcher Lynne Brickley discovered an amazing, and previously unknown, connection to Abraham Lincoln.  Litchfield student Judge John Pitcher advised a youthful Lincoln about the practice of law, gave him advice, and lent him books including two copies of Blackstone’s Commentary in which Lincoln is said to have penned his name.

The staff is excited to learn of this further evidence of the Law School’s national significance, and will continue to research the connection.

Further details:

http://faculty.utep.edu/Portals/1649/portfolio/dissertationchapter.pdf

http://books.google.com/books?id=pMFlBVZtaWUC&pg=PA130&lpg=PA130&dq=%22john+pitcher%22+indiana&source=bl&ots=7k-n8E2Iog&sig=42vqRl72q31CVWptKuOcE3wzz_E&hl=en&ei=y64NStsZhoe2B5qhmYoI&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=9#PPA130,M1

Miss Wiggin’s Attic

Charlotte Monroe Wiggin

Charlotte Wiggin

Charlotte Wiggin

Those of you who remember when the Society’s research library was on the top floor may recall this brass plaque on the wall at the stair landing:

 Charlotte Monroe Wiggin
1886-1974
Curator for 18 years
Without her dedication and interest in collecting objects and papers of historical value
this museum would not have grown to its present stature

 Miss Wiggin, as she was known to all, was the society’s curator from 1949 through her retirement in 1967.  And during those years the museum and library truly were “Miss Wiggin’s Attic.”  The early years of the twentieth century were a time of tremendous growth for the Society.  These were the years that Society’s earliest supporters, most notably Emily Noyes Vanderpoel and Mary Perkins Quincy tirelessly collected objects and papers for the museum and library.  Miss Wiggin took on the task of more formally organizing and cataloguing this vast collection. Her efforts laid the groundwork for the work we do today.

 

Miss Wiggin lived a rich and colorful life before she returned to Litchfield and the Historical Society.  She graduated from Smith College in 1908, taught school in New York City and later became the headmistress of schools in Pittsburgh and Washington DC.  She served with the Red Cross working with orphans in Serbia , traveled throughout Europe and operated a children’s summer camp in France for many years.

 

The picture shown here is our only known image of Miss Wiggin.  We hope any of you who remember Miss Wiggin will share your memories – and photographs – with us.  Just click on comment to add your thoughts.

 

And check back often to find out what is new in “Miss Wiggins Attic”