LITCHFIELD'S
ALMOST 300 years of growth and change are reflected through its
permanent collection, which contains material related to local families,
homes, businesses and institutions. Objects in the Society's collection
include furniture, paintings, textiles, toys, ceramics, trade signs,
and other fine and decorative arts. The collection includes objects
that date from the founding of the town in 1719 to the present day.
But
the majority of the museum's objects date from 1781 to 1840, a time
when Litchfield was a bustling commercial and educational center.
During these years the town formed an important crossroads. And
it was known throughout the country for its two outstanding schools:
the Litchfield Law School (1774-1833) and the Litchfield Female
Academy (1792-1833). Visitors to the Society can tour the Tapping
Reeve House & Law School. Reeve was the first lawyer to develop
a course of formal lectures that became the basis for the university
law school system. The Society owns several of the original furnishings
from the Reeve's house and the law school, Reeve's law library,
the notebooks produced by the law students, images of the students,
and a large related collection of 18th and 19th century writing
equipment.
The
Litchfield Female Academy was one of the first major academically-focused
educational institutions for women in the United States. The Society
owns elaborate needlework pictures, textile-related items including
several lace pieces and a quilt, drawings and watercolors, charts
and maps, student diaries and journals, student albums and copy
books, catalogs, diplomas, play and essay manuscripts, school books
and assorted correcpondence of Academy students and their families.
The
fine arts collection is particulary noteworthy for this period and
includes portraits of the town's families, by artists including
Gilbert Stuart, Ammi Phillips, Ezra Ames, Richard Jennys, Frederick
Herring and Waldo & Jewett. Highlights include eleven portraits
and one landscape by Ralph Earl and thirty-three portrait miniatures
by Anson Dickinson.
The
Litchfield Historical Society continues to add to its museum collection
through donations and purchases. Anyone with materials that might
interest the Society should contact
the Curator. The staff is always happy to discuss a possible acquisition,
whether the object or papers are high style and fancy or down to
earth and everyday, 18th century or 20th century. In fact, the Society
particularly seeks everday objects because everyday items were often
worn out and consequently rare. However, to give our visitors a
balanced view of Litchfield it is critical that all types of objects,
from all periods, be available for study and exhibition.