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| Litchfield
History Museum today |
Society
members were swept up by the enthusiasm for national history
that was sparked by the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition.
Led by local resident and amateur historian Emily Noyes Vanderpoel,
the historical society fervently collected 18th and early
19th century objects and papers. This material remains the
core of the Societys collections. In 1962 the town library
moved to larger quarters enabling the Society to expand its
storage and gallery space to occupy the entire original building.
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| Tapping
Reeve Law School attached to home on East Street
c1900. |
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In
1911 the Society added a building to its growing collection
of local artifacts. A community member donated the countrys
first law school, and the Society moved the building to its
side yard. Nineteen years later, the Society bought the Tapping
Reeve House, the home of the law school founder. Using a wooden
cab truck with sleigh wheels, members of the Society moved
the school down the street to its original home next to the
Reeve house. Both buildings were restored and opened to the
public in 1933. The Tapping Reeve House and Law School were
declared National Historic Landmarks in 1966.
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