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Kids Take Main Street As A Route Through History
(with cuts)
BY MICHELE HOGAN
Second graders at Middle Gate School enjoyed a walk through historic Newtown
on Monday as part of their study of local history.
First they met Herb Rosenthal, first selectman, at the Town Hall. Then they
toured the Booth Library, Trinity Church, the Matthew Curtiss House, and the
Meeting House in small groups.
When Mrs Wenblad's second graders visited The Matthew Curtiss House on Main
Street, they discovered why their teacher was missing from school that day --
she was taking the part of a docent for the Curtiss House second grade tours.
Mrs Wenblad told the children that this morning she had let her son go to
school without splitting wood first, because there was enough wood left over
from yesterday. She acted awfully surprised when none of the visiting children
had split wood before school today. And even more surprised when none had
split wood yesterday either. She asked them "how can you possibly cook and
stay warm without a fire?"
The children, warming to the subject, attempted many explanations of hot water
flowing through pipes, and knobs that you turned. But Mrs Wenblad insisted
that there had to be fire somewhere for something to get warm. She got in the
last word when a child finally described the furnace that heats the water.
She exclaimed that this system of heating water by fire was almost as crazy as
using lightning from the sky to give you something the children had called
electricity.
Getting back to the real things that needed to be done in a household, Mrs
Wenblad asked the girls if they churned the butter. When they said "no." She
muttered under her breath, "I'd almost say they were a little lazy."
The children giggled, then listened with rapt attention as Mrs Wenblad talked
to another docent about a meal they were planning. It seemed that they were in
luck tonight. One of them had seen a turkey and shot it, so there would be
lots of meat to eat.
After the Matthew Curtiss House, the students walked on to the next historic
building.
Sherry Paisley, agent for the Meeting House, described the history of the
Meeting House. The first meeting house was built in 1720 in the middle of Main
Street, right where the flagpole is now. It was moved, then rebuilt in 1808
with many of the same beams used in the 1720 meeting house.
Mrs Paisley described how on Sunday, people came in the morning, went home for
lunch, then came back to church for the whole afternoon. She said that during
church a man stood at the back of the sanctuary with a long pole with a
feather on it. If the man saw anyone falling asleep, it was his job to wake
them up with a tickle or a prod.
Children also learned that it was better not to be late to church. You would
have to sit in the last pew, facing the back of the church all day. (To make
matters worse, the way the pews were designed there was an uncomfortable roll
of wood that would be pressing into your back all day.)
When it was time for the children to leave the meeting house, four children,
assigned as bell ringers, were led up the narrow front stairs where they
reached for a heavy bell-rope.
Pulling the rope to ring the bell at the meeting house was far harder than
Carly Doherty, second grader, thought it would be. But she pulled and tugged,
and with a little help from Tom Paisley, who assists with the meeting house,
they made a fine loud ringing of the bell.
Sherry Paisley, Meeting House Agent, said that she always looks forward to the
children's tours. She said the kids are simply wonderful.
The children then went on to the Booth library and Trinity Church before
heading back to school.
