Saturday, April 26, 2025

Program: A Walking Tour of Foundry Village

The Cary cider and vinegar works and workers, which operated from 1860 into the 1950s. Photo from the Colrain Historical Society collection.

The Colrain Historical Society will host a walking tour of Foundry Village led by Judith Roberts and Jonathan LaGreze Thursday, May 8, at 7:15 p.m. following a brief business meeting at 7. ​

Site of the first grist mill in Colrain, Foundry Village was a busy industrial center for 200 years. The Langstroth Moveable Frame Bee Hive, still in use by beekeepers today, was first manufactured here. Because of all the industry in this bustling little community, it was electrified by 1910, early for a rural town. ​

Participants will see and learn about the Smith covered bridge, the schoolhouse, the Baptist Church, sites of the foundry, grist mill, turning shop, blacksmith’s shop, and the butcher shop, ending up in the vinegar bottling room of the former Cary Cider Mill for discussion and refreshments. The walk will be only a few hundred yards, and the bottling room is wheelchair accessible. ​

Park at the Baptist Church for the meeting at 7 and the tour to follow. In the event of rain, the tour and meeting will be postponed until Thursday, May 15. To inquire about postponement, call Debby at 413-624-8800 or Belden at 413-625-2003.



Watch For It


At last, spring! As frost leaves the ground behind the Museum, heavy equipment will move in to replace the out-of-code septic system with a tight tank. Next step: structural work to allow the installation of a handicap-accessible bathroom at ground level, which state code requires for a certificate of occupancy. It's been a long haul, and costly. 

While this project winds its way through the bureaucracy, volunteers have labored to inventory, scan and digitize the historical society's collection of artifacts, documents, archival photographs, letters and deeds - nearly 3,000 of them so far - which constitute the material history of Colrain. When they finish their work, we'll know exactly what we have and where it is. Ultimately, this will make possible a museum online for the world to see. 

But first, a physical museum that taps the collection to tell Colrain's story about early settlers, its scattered villages and the men and women, farmers, mill workers, and woodsmen who lived and worked here. We'll show their schools, mills, churches, the clothes they wore and who they were, right up through the 20th century. The Curatorial Committee is working on that too. 

And while all this goes on largely unseen, we'll keep you busy with programs in the Stacy Barn and events through early December. We'll have programs on the history of sheep in Colrain, on a sense of place in Colrain, among other Colrain-focused topics.

Mark your calendar for Sunday, August 3, and an ice cream social with live music behind the museum, celebrating the 100th birthday of a lively CHS member (it's a surprise). 

Our popular "Colrain and the Hilltowns on Canvas" returns for its sixth year with a new display of paintings and drawings of local scenes by known professionals and talented amateur artists, September 19-21. 

And don't miss the Christmas potluck and auction (live and silent) fundraiser at the Shelburne-Buckland Community Center in Shelburne Falls, December 6. You can help us by donating Colrain items, crafts for gifts, antiques and baked goods for sale. Watch for details. 

Coming this fall to a store near you: the Colrain Apple Cookbook, long in the works, with apple recipes from Colrain cooks, photos and a brief history of apples and orchards in Colrain.


Historical Notes 2025

The Spring 2025 edition of Historical Notes, the newsletter of the Colrain Historical Society, was mailed recently.

Click on the photos of the pages below to view a larger image.






Ancient maple tree and fresh daffodils on Adamsville Road in late April 2025.




Saturday, April 19, 2025

Revolutionary Donuts



From the April 2025 Special Edition of the Colrain Clarion.
 
Two hundred and fifty years ago, thirty Colrain men marched eastward on the morning of April 20,1775, in response to the conflict between the British and Minutemen at Lexington & Concord. 

These Colrain men were fortified by donuts that their mothers, wives, sisters and daughters had stayed up all night making for them. The story goes "... they camped on the floors getting sleep ... while the women of the neighborhood spent the whole night in cooking and frying doughnuts for them." 

Ten of the Colrain men who marched to Boston April 20th 1775 are buried in four local cemeteries: six in Chandler Hill, two in North River, and one each in Brick School and Christian Hill cemeteries. More info on who these men were and photos of some of the their headstones are here

(Thank you Dave Allen!) 


The Colrain Resolves 
Unlike the settlers in the valley, who were almost all of English extraction, Colrain’s Scotch-Irish settlers had no love for the English. Resentments festered, and in January, 1774, at Wood’s Tavern the prominent men of the town gathered and drew up what became known as the Colrain Resolves. 

Predating the Declaration of Independence by 18 months, the six Resolves declare the rights of the individual, objection to taxation without representation, legal authority for independence, the right of the group to self-government, the necessity for action, a listing of specific grievances, the necessity for independence rather than mere reform, and the struggle for independence transcending the individual.

Colrain was ardently patriotic. In 1775, when the alarm rang at Lexington, Colrain Minutemen marched to Boston. Later they served at Ticonderoga and at the Battle of Bennington. Ten percent of Colrain’s population - 198 men - served during the Revolution. 

 (Thank you Belden Merims!)