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Graphic Enterprises - Home of The Pioneer Times a Web News site about Re-Enacting and Living History |
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The walk from the parking lot to the blockhouse usually seems a short one - but tonight it was a cold and chilly one. But as always the theatregoers entering the blockhouse were greeted by members of the Fort Boonesborough Foundation, the group sponsoring the fireside chats. My first stop was to the coffee pot for a hot cup of coffee provided by Starbucks of Winchester. Rich Copeland a foundation member also had hot chocolate ready for the visitors. After a quick warm up visitors headed down the ramp to the main theatre area of the blockhouse. Most stopped for a look at the diorama - a period display showing two eastern woodland Indians with settlers in a woodsy setting. It is the first part of the new museum to be completed.The figures were fashioned from life and the face of one of the figures was actually molded from the face of long time re-enactor and Chataqua performer Danny Hinton. Hinton portrays Dr. Thomas Walker one of the Kentucky's earliest explorers who is said to have built the first cabin in Kentucky. |
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the weekend speakers. I heard talk of Steve Caudill as ``Daniel Boone, and Matt Bryant as ``William Whitley" as I circled through the diners. Perennial favorite Mel Hankla debuted Isaac Shelby here last week and is scheduled as General George Rogers Clark on the final February weekend. (See story below and also visit Hankla's new American Historic Services website at www.americanhistoricservices.com) |
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But soon the conversation switched from the weather outside and the previous week's performers to the event that was about to begin - The Story of Anne McGinty, performed by Melanie Kuntz. Although Kuntz has been a re-enactor for only three years, she has become a familiar face around Fort Boonesborough. As a spinner and weaver she can often be seen during Living History Weekends in the weaving cabin - lending a hand. (After the performance several people inquired about the introduction to Kuntz's performance - which includes bio information so we have included it below.) I guess you could say that Bill and Anne Farmer helped spawn the idea of a first person Anne McGinty character. It was during a meeting about the upcoming ``Women on the Frontier Weekend"- June 9 & 10 that the discussion turned to just how little documentation there is on the early women settlers. Our early history was written by men. Men kept most journals, men owned the property, the voting rights and the right to own land. Thus all the land claim documents can be traced to men. Women did not always know how to read and write - so their own accounts are less prevalent. Another part of McGinty's story that makes her unusual is that she did own property, land and was licensed to operate the first Ordinary in Harrodstown. |
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But research is only half of a performance like this. Then comes the job of bringing Anne McGinty to life - to give her form, substance - to make her human. Kuntz tells of the journey to Kentucky with second husband William Poague and their children. (She had previously buried a husband and daughter in Virginia.) The two things that McGinty is most known for are the spinning wheel that she brought from Virginia and the loom that her husband made for her here. They first lived at Boonesborough (they had been neighbors of the Boones on the Holston) and later moved to Harrodstown were she is buried. I found myself caught up in the story as apparently did others in the room. I could feel her pain as she held the hand of her dying husband. As his life slipped away she felt anger at his having left her alone to raise their children. McGinty married again, and again buried a husband. Melanie Kuntz made it all real. With a slightly southern Virginia drawl she became Anne McGinty. Kuntz also examined what a frontier woman's feelings might have been against the Indians that caused so much torment in her life versus the Christian manner in which she had been raised. This performance gave true voice to what it must have been like for the earliest women on the Frontier. It was also a gift to those of us that study history. For it is relatively easy to pick up a book on Daniel Boone or James Harrod and read it. But if you want to learn about one of the early women - you will have to hunt for the information - unless you were lucky enough to attend Kuntz's performance Saturday night of Anne McGinty. |
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Mountain in Tennessee during the revolution and also in The War of 1812 at The Battle of the Thames in Canada when so many Kentucky lives were lost. Isaac Shelby will be a work in progress, said Hankla. Shelby will grow and evolve as my knowledge and confidence grow. It is often questions from the audience that help with the evolution of a character. Something that someone will ask that I don't know will take me go back to research again and some new facts will emerge. Billl Farmer, Living History Coordinator at Fort Boonesborough, said ``it's refreshing to see another Kentucky Hero come to the forefront. And he added, ``to have his story told by such a masterful storyteller, in such a grand style." As for me, I liked everything I saw and can only say to those of you, that missed it, that you missed a first class performance. For more information about Mel Hankla go to www.americanhistoricservices.com Also check out the recent story by Helen McKinney about the American Historic Services web site, |
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Photography Exhibit at Early KY Market Fair |
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The new location for this years Early Ky Market Fair hosted by the Salt River Long Rifles will have an added feature. The Pioneer Times will exhibit over 100 17 x 22" photo prints by Jim and Kathy Cummings. Many will be from photos taken in the 2006 season and previously only seen on this website. Others will be from photos taken over the last 8 years at varouis re-enacting events. In addition other prints will be shown on the large plasma screen near the dining area. Larry Wilcher of the Salt River Long Rifles contacted the Cummings' shortly after finding the new location hall at Eagle Creek. ``As I looked at the wide expanse of bright white walls - your photos were the first thing I thought of." said Wilcher. ``What a way to set the mood for the Early Ky Market Fair than by covering the walls with photos of the events that many of us have participated in." |
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In addition to the still photos on the wall - there will be DVD's running in the hall of the almost 20 DVD's and video productions that Cummings has produced over the last 8 years. Other vendors according to
Wilcher will be Dale Payne, author; Ky Leather and Hides; Hamilton Dry Goods, with lots of fabric; Nathan and Andrea Logston with Taylor-Rose Historical Clothing; Heart Felt Creations, wool products; Charlie Wallingford,
bladesmith and gunmaker; Bill Smith, bags and horns There will be over 115 tables. So whether you are already needing supplies for next spring or a Christmas present for a fellow re-enactor or history buff The Early Kentucky Market Fair is the place to be. |
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Fayetteville, WV For all of you that are avid readers of Dale Payne's books - you're in for a treat and just in time for the holiday season. Dale Payne's The Pioneers is based on the Lyman C. Draper Manuscripts but incorporates other historical documents as well. Payne does all of his own work in researching and believe me reading the Draper Manuscripts is no easy task, for I have tried. The work is massive and extensive and takes the patience of a saint. What makes Dale Payne so priceless to those of us that research history is that he knows what is of value and of interest to us. Many writers, researchers and journalists begin projects that they may have no direct links to. But Payne has experienced the type of life that he researches. As a woodsman and hunter, he knows the woods and terrain of which our forgotton pioneers speak. It is what makes his work so valuable. It is with this background that he brings the Draper Manuscripts to life in all of his books. In this latest book The Pioneers he brings 16 individuals to life. Payne has walked with a longrifle in his hand and he has carried the tomahawk. When he chooses a subject to research it is with this in mind. In this latest book - Payne has chosen men that were equals to the more famous pioneers but maybe not as well know. The names of the 16 men he has chosen are names like Robert Patterson, Joseph Bishop and William Linn. The names of men that you have passed in your research when reading about their more famous counterparts. You might remember that Patterson was connected with Dayton, Ohio or that Linn was with George Rogers Clark's expedition to Kaskaskia in 1778. Joseph Bishop's name might be more familiar to those that research Tennessee than those that read mainly of Kentucky. But here Payne has given them their own spotlight. A chapter devoted to each man. Meticulously researched to bring them to life. Payne gives us a deeper glimpse into these men and in Dale's own words - ``they were not men who set out to make the history books. They were your average 18th century individual who was simply trying to establish a homestead or make a living for them and their families on the frontier. There were many others who played important roles also. These are but a few." The 16 men included in The Pioneers are: Henry Skaggs, Edmund Jennings, Thomas Sharpe Spencer, Issac Crabtree, Hugh F. Bell, James Galloway, Bland Ballard, William Linn, Michael Cassiday, The Harmans, Col. Robert Patterson, James Ray, Joseph Bishop, Charles Poke, David Morgan, and William Haymond, Jr. |
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The Photo Gallery of Events |
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Living History Events - 18th Century |
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Living History Events - 19th Century |
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