Clare McKeagney
Posts by Clare McKeagney:
Over the winter we received several gifts to our collection. One is a photo of a home in the village from times gone by. And another is a crazy quilt purchased from the auction of Ora Keller Brine’s home. Enjoy the slide show! And see our newsletter published in May for more details about these gifts and more….
The Denmark community has suffered many losses of family, friends and neighbors in 2015.
Jens R. Hansen Sr.
Joseph Guidi Sr.
Beverly H. Ramsden
Doris M. Osgood
Margaret A. Pelton
Trafton ‘Skip’ Westleigh
Virginia M. Webber
Jeannette E. Tardiff
Marion Jean Fissel
Marie E. Donato
Phyllis R. Forman
Marvis Grace Batchelder
Sylvia A. Eaton
Nancy Masterton
Pamela J. Allen
Augustus ‘Gus’ T. Espeaignette
Mary Kathy Sanborn
Stasia Renski Stearns
Elizabeth ‘Betsy’ McDermith
Arleene M. Keresztessy
Elsie M. Mowatt
Robert W. Linnell
Ida M. McLeod
Percy W. Lord
Ruth P. Linnell
Florence K. Doe
Eleanor A. Young
Basil C. Tasker Jr.
Robert P. Doyle
We at Denmark Historical Society and Denmark Congregational Church are pleased to welcome Anne B. Gass to Centennial Hall Sunday, January 17th at 2 PM where she will give a presentation on her research about women’s suffrage efforts.
Anne B. Gass is Florence Brooks Whitehouse’s great-granddaughter. She is the author of Voting Down the Rose: Florence Brooks Whitehouse and Maine’s Fight for Woman Suffrage, published in 2014. Her article, “Florence Brooks Whitehouse and Maine’s Vote to Ratify Women’s Suffrage in 1919,” appeared in the Maine History Journal in 2012. Gass lectures regularly on Florence Brooks Whitehouse and Maine suffrage history at conferences, historical societies, libraries, and other events.
In her professional life, Gass has continued her great-grandmother’s activist tradition. She is the founder and principal of ABG Consulting, a small business devoted to supporting nonprofits, local and state governments, and foundations in their efforts to help people in need build stable, productive lives. Her clients create affordable housing and provide services that help people who are low income, homeless, are refugees, have mental illness, or incarcerated.
Working both in Maine and nationally Gass has written over $150 million in successful federal grants since founding her business in 1993. She has also completed numerous other special projects. Gass received her BA degree from Reed College in 1982 and a MA from the University of Maryland in 1987.
FMI: http://smile.amazon.com/Voting-Down-Rose-Anne-Gass/dp/1633810119/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1452366585&sr=8-1&keywords=voting+down+the+rose
During the last two weeks of October, a machine of historical interest was moved into the mill museum in Centennial Hall.
The 1890 S.A. Woods planer-matcher (also called a 4-sided planer) was originally purchased for use at the number 5 power site in Bridgton. It was originally water powered, and remained so until sometime after 1920, when the site and machinery were purchased by Harry Bisbee. He converted the mill to electric power.
The planer survived a fire at the mill in 1953, and may have been converted to diesel power at that time.
Harry Bisbee died in 1959, and the planer apparently sat unused until 1972, when it was purchased by Gordon Brill and his partner, Elden (sp?) Beane.
The planer was moved to the saw mill at Brill Lumber Co. on rt. 117, north of Bridgton, where it was powered by a large gas motor. It was operated for many years by Gordon, and later by his son Scott.
It took some work to get the planer ready for the move, including partial disassembly, and rolling it by hand out of the shed where it was located. Scott Brill loaded it onto the Brill Lumber Co. boom truck, and then delivered it to the front of Centennial Hall.
There it got a good wash down, probably the first in its life. Removing the accumulated gummy sawdust revealed the original dark green paint, with red highlights.
It was then moved into the Hall, by a combination of hand and tractor power.
Thanks to Joe Wist, Nick Rehmert, and Scott Brill.
The planer joins a collection of other early mill machinery, illustrating water-powered technology from the 19th and early 20th centuries. It was operational before the move, but will receive a thorough cosmetic and mechanical going-over.