Cranberry Chronicles Issue 2
Island
Historical
The Great Cranberry Island Historical Society
cranberry
Newsletter
Great
Society
Summer 2002
July 20 Quilt Show
The Great Cranberry Island Historical Museum celebrates its third
season this year with a new summer-long display highlighted by a
free Quilting Talk and Exhibit on Saturday, July 20, at 1:30 p.m.
Guest speaker Evelyn Beaulieu, Director of the Center for Adult
Learning and Literacy at the University of Maine, Orono, will
present a talk entitled "Women You Should Know in the History of
Quilting." She will also explain, "How to Read a Quilt."
Complementing the talk, Museum chairman Charlotte Harlan has
collected a sampling of quilts made on Great Cranberry Island by
Marjorie Phippen and others. Marjorie, who died last March at the
age of 97, was postmaster here for many years, and was also active
in the Ladies Aid Society. The exhibit highlights quilts by Marjorie
as a special tribute to her.
Even if you miss this event, please visit the museum's summer-long
display, "Crafts, Then and Now," featuring examples of all the
island's crafts: Indian sweetgrass baskets, carvings, quilts and
Marjorie Phippin working at the
Ladies Aid. Photo from the Maine
Times, Summer 1984 issue.
Additional Quarters!
The Cranberry Isles School Board has granted the Society's request for use of the unused schoolroom in the
Longfellow School, which we will share with the Library. This new space allows us to expand our exhibit area and
create a new Community Multimedia Center.
Multimedia Center Now Open!
Thanks to hard work last winter, the Great Cranberry Island Historical Society's dream of a "Community Multimedia
Center" has now become reality. The center aims to offer "big city" print, audio, and video media services to local
individuals, groups, and businesses, without having to leave the island.
The idea for the center originated with the need for equipment to update the Historical Society's publications capability,
and to energize the museum with audiovisual exhibits, enlivening the existing displays of artifacts and captioned
photos.
The Community Multimedia Center is installed in a corner of the museum's new room. It consists of a powerful new
computer with word processing, music, and realtime video editing capability, plus a scanner, high-speed color laser
printer, video projector, VCR, and DVD player.
The equipment is to be managed by the Historical Society, but shared for use by all Cranberry Isles groups and
individuals. A volunteer will be on hand to help any comers make color copies, signs, documents, print-on-demand
(cont'd on back)