Did You Know: Getting Around in Winter, Part III - The Ice Industry
Archives Mary Wesley Archives Mary Wesley

Did You Know: Getting Around in Winter, Part III - The Ice Industry

In this month’s Did You Know? we look at the once-thriving business of cutting, harvesting, storing, and selling ice through the experiences of Albert Morelli. As a boy in the 1920s and 1930s, Albert worked with his father, Frank Morelli, who had an ice business based in Rouses Point, NY, serving New York state towns on Lake Champlain as well as towns in Québec. His stories come from a 1994 interview with Vermont Folklife's Greg Sharrow as part of a collection of interviews about life around Lake Champlain.

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Did You Know: Getting Around in Winter, Part II
Archives Mary Wesley Archives Mary Wesley

Did You Know: Getting Around in Winter, Part II

In this month’s Did You Know we share winter travel stories from Alden Bettis of Waitsfield, Vermont. Alden was born during World War I, and grew up during the Depression. He shares about sledding to school, getting his milk truck out of the ditch using only a piece of rope, and riding an empty gas tank down the slopes at Mad River Glen!

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Did You Know: Getting Around in Winter
Archives Mary Wesley Archives Mary Wesley

Did You Know: Getting Around in Winter

 Whether crossing a frozen body of water, or traveling hilly rural roads, Vermonters have had to come up with some particularly ingenious ways to get around in winter.  In this month's "Did You Know?", we hear from four people who describe clever–and sometimes humorous–ways they and their friends managed to get from place to place in a world beset by ice and snow.

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Did You Know? Ticonderoga Part 5: The Ticonderoga in Winter
Archives Mary Wesley Archives Mary Wesley

Did You Know? Ticonderoga Part 5: The Ticonderoga in Winter

The VT Folklife Archive is full of amazing first-person accounts of everyday life in Vermont and New England–past and present. In this feature, we share these stories with you.

Well, last month we thought we were concluding our four-part series on the Ticonderoga, but there were just too many good stories about the Ti left untold. So this month with cold weather setting in here in Vermont, we're adding one more set of stories about the Ticonderoga in winter–a time when the work changed to fit the needs of the season.

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Did You Know? - Ticonderoga Part 4: Life at Shelburne Museum
Archives Mary Wesley Archives Mary Wesley

Did You Know? - Ticonderoga Part 4: Life at Shelburne Museum

This month, we continue with the fourth and final article in our four-part series on the steamship Ticonderoga. In this month's article, we hear recollections from Lynn Bottom–a former captain on the Hudson River Dayline, but with a long history with Lake Champlain–about how the Ti was moved from the lake to its current location on land at the museum. Then we hear from Chip Stulin, the project manager who oversaw the restoration of the Ti in the 1990s. Both are recorded in interviews with VT Folklife founder Jane Beck in the mid 1990's.

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Did You Know? - Ticonderoga Part 3: Favorite Stories
Archives Mary Wesley Archives Mary Wesley

Did You Know? - Ticonderoga Part 3: Favorite Stories

Vermont Folklife is proud to have a collection of interviews of many of the people who lived and worked on the Steamboat Ticonderoga during its 47-year life on Lake Champlain between 1906 and 1953. Running a large steamship required finely-tuned systems, and many of the interviewees talk about these systems, which they used to operate the ship. This month we feature the voices of Jerry Aske, Dick Derry, and Dick Adams, recorded in interviews with VT Folklife founder Jane Beck in the late 1990s.

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Did You Know? - Ticonderoga Part 2: “Pulling the Fires” and other work onboard
Archives Mary Wesley Archives Mary Wesley

Did You Know? - Ticonderoga Part 2: “Pulling the Fires” and other work onboard

Vermont Folklife is proud to have a collection of interviews of many of the people who lived and worked on the Steamboat Ticonderoga during its 47-year life on Lake Champlain between 1906 and 1953. Running a large steamship required finely-tuned systems, and many of the interviewees talk about these systems, which they used to operate the ship. This month we feature the voices of Jerry Aske, Dick Derry, and Dick Adams, recorded in interviews with VT Folklife founder Jane Beck in the late 1990s.

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Did You Know? - Ticonderoga Steamship Part 1: Teenage Deckhands
Archives Mary Wesley Archives Mary Wesley

Did You Know? - Ticonderoga Steamship Part 1: Teenage Deckhands

The VFC Archives is full of amazing first-person accounts of everyday life in Vermont and New England–past and present. In this feature, we share these stories with you. The steamboat Ticonderoga is a National Historic Landmark that lives on the grounds of the Shelburne Museum in Shelburne, VT, where it portrays life onboard in 1923. This year, then, a trip aboard the “Ti” is a trip 100 years back in time. Vermont Folklife is proud to have a collection of interviews of many of the people who lived and worked on the Ticonderoga during that time.

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Did You Know? - Hastings Store in West Danville, VT
Archives Mary Wesley Archives Mary Wesley

Did You Know? - Hastings Store in West Danville, VT

The VFC Archives is full of amazing first-person accounts of everyday life in Vermont and New England–past and present. In this feature, we share these stories with you. Continuing with our focus on Vermont general stores, this month we look at Hastings Store, a family-run general store in West Danville. Hastings has been owned by the same family since 1913, when it was purchased by Gilbert and Jenny Hastings. Their great-granddaughter Jenny Rafuse runs the store today.

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Did You Know? - F.H. Gillingham and Sons General Store
Archives Mary Wesley Archives Mary Wesley

Did You Know? - F.H. Gillingham and Sons General Store

The VFC Archives is full of amazing first-person accounts of everyday life in Vermont and New England–past and present. In this feature, we share these stories with you. In the early 1990's, Vermont Folklife founder Jane Beck met with Jireh Billings and Frank Billings–the 4th generation to run the store–to talk about its history, their involvement, and how the family kept their general store thriving through changing times.

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Did You Know? - A Stop at H.N. Williams Store
Archives Mary Wesley Archives Mary Wesley

Did You Know? - A Stop at H.N. Williams Store

Our associate archivist, Susan Creighton loves to explore Vermont, and following a recent recommendation she set out to visit the H.N. Williams Store in Dorset. She loved it, and afterwards she discovered something terrific: we have interviews about this selfsame store in our archive!

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Did You Know? - Visitn’ with Hollis Squier
Archives Dan Kirk Archives Dan Kirk

Did You Know? - Visitn’ with Hollis Squier

The VT Folklife Archive is full of amazing first-person accounts of everyday life in Vermont and New England–past and present. One of these interviews was with Hollis Squier of Tinmouth, VT. Hollis's family moved to Vermont in the early 1950's from upstate New York and took up farming in Tinmouth. Hollis took to small-town life, and from a young age got involved in town government. One of Hollis's early town positions was as the road commissioner - a role he took on as a young man in his early twenties.

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Did You Know? The Snelling Collection - Part 2
Archives Dan Kirk Archives Dan Kirk

Did You Know? The Snelling Collection - Part 2

Between 2002 and 2004, on behalf of the Snelling Center for Government, VFC founder Jane Beck interviewed 35 current and former Vermont legislators to explore the culture of Vermont’s citizen legislature and the personal relationships from which this culture emerges.

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Did You Know? The Snelling Collection - Part 1
Archives Susan Creighton Archives Susan Creighton

Did You Know? The Snelling Collection - Part 1

Between 2002 and 2004, on behalf of the Snelling Center for Government, VFC founder Jane Beck interviewed 35 current and former Vermont legislators to explore the culture of Vermont’s citizen legislature and the personal relationships from which this culture emerges.

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Did You Know? - “Jeanne Brink: Basket Maker”
Archives, Living Traditions Mary Wesley Archives, Living Traditions Mary Wesley

Did You Know? - “Jeanne Brink: Basket Maker”

The VFC Archives is full of amazing first-person accounts of everyday life in Vermont and New England–past and present. In this feature, we'll share these stories with you.

This month meet Abenaki basket maker Jeanne Brink. Jeanne is someone with the distinction of having been both an apprentice in the early years of the Vermont Traditional Art Apprenticeship Program and later a mentor artist, coming full circle to pass on the knowledge, skills and traditions that she learned.

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Did You Know? - “If the Shoe Fits”
Archives, Living Traditions Mary Wesley Archives, Living Traditions Mary Wesley

Did You Know? - “If the Shoe Fits”

The VFC Archives is full of amazing first-person accounts of everyday life in Vermont and New England–past and present. In this feature, we'll share these stories with you.

We begin with master shoemaker Dan Freeman of Middlebury and apprentice Anne Callahan who worked together beginning in 2004. Freeman’s shop, Dan Freeman’s Leatherwork, has been a Middlebury staple for decades.

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