|
News from Garfield Farm |
CAMPTON HILLS- On Sunday, October 4th from 11:30am-
4pm, families and friends can step back in time and discover life
before modern technology, at Garfield Farm Museum's 28th annual Harvest
Days. An archaeological dig will be this year's special feature.
Harvest Days provides children and adults an
opportunity to learn about the realities of our rural heritage. The
historic demonstrations remind us of the incredible amount of effort it
took to survive in a non-mechanized world. As wheat is run through the
fanning mill, children can see firsthand how the grain that made the
mid-west so important, was processed in the 19th century. Fall was the
time to harvest the bounty of the orchard, and apples were a versatile
and important crop. The flash of red and clatter of gears, the sweet
fragrance that arises as the apples are crushed, and the golden brown
cider flowing into the bucket captures the attention of young and old
alike at the cider pressing demonstration.
The demonstrations of 1840s household and farm
skills at Harvest Days stimulate young minds to be creative in problem
solving. Their imaginations are even catered to by the words and tall
tales of Reid Miller, Story Minstrel, whose traditional yarns and songs
fit the historic setting of Garfield Farm.
Tours of the 1846 brick inn will be ongoing.
These tours often spark conversations between grandparent and child as
grandparents recall their childhood visits to relatives‚ farms.
Tours of the museum's prairie reconnect visitors to nature and its
resilience, as the last prairie flowers bloom and go to seed.
This year, visitors will have a chance to help
sift dirt for artifacts as part of an archaeological dig sponsored by
Campton Historic Agricultural Lands. Test pits will be dug in an
effort to find the original well that was on the farm when the Garfield
family moved here from Vermont in 1841.
Visitors will also be able to view the ongoing
restoration work being done on the farm's oldest building, the 1842 hay
and grain barn. Trillium Dell Timberworks of Knoxville, IL has been
restoring the timbers of the south gable in preparation of restoring
the lightening damaged roof in October. The barn's south peak and wall
were damaged in August 2005. However, the museum needs the continued
support of individual donors to complete the project. A $15,000 Kane
County River Boat is being applied to this $90,000 project.
A bake sale will be held and refreshments will
be offered in the museum's visitor's center, the Atwell Burr House. The
event benefits the museum's ongoing efforts to restore the historic
buildings and to provide educational programming.
Schools are invited to reserve space for their
classes on Friday October 2nd. The public is invited to attend on
October 4th when donations are $6 for adults and $3 for children under
twelve. Organized youth groups are asked for a donation of $4 per youth
and $5 for adult chaperones.
The 370-acre Garfield Farm Museum is the only
historically intact former 1840s Illinois prairie farmstead and
teamster inn being restored by donors and volunteers from 2800
households in 37 states as an 1840s working farm museum. Garfield Farm
Museum is located 5 miles west of Geneva, IL off ILL Rt.38 on Garfield
Road. For information, call (630) 584-8485 or email
info@garfieldfarm.org.