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Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Potts Inn Museum Outreach in Johnson County

The Outreach Program has begun, even though we have not recieved official word on our Humanities Council grant.  Today I did a program at the Johnson County Senior Activity Center in Clarksville.  What a warm reception I received!  People were eager to learn about Potts Inn and the Potts Family!  In addition to a few stories, I facilitated a "Show and Tell" session where participants bring an item: postcard, award, medal, interesting object, and share it's significance. 

Here's what Mrs. Doris Caplinger had to share:  "My Silver Plaque award and a book that has a poem in it [that I wrote].   The highest ranked award you can earn in Poetry Writing for my Poem of Babies [and] a selection of my poems I wrote for you to have."

Well, I for one am so happy to receive them!  I plan to publish them here, with Mrs. Caplinger's permission:

Each poem is represented here exactly as Mrs. Caplinger wrote it.

Thankfulness
Each moring when I awake
I look into the sky
I thank the Lord I thank my friends
That I am still alive.
If ever I should be cruel
To my family or other people,
I pray to the Lord, for themany things
While he's standing on the steeple.
If he sould ever come and take me away with Him
I hope that he will find
I'm not guilty of many sins
That hehas given to us
To take with us each day
Because in time to come
I have this verse to say
If ever I should do something
That I am grateful for,
I hope when the angels come to get me the Lord will be waiting at Heaven's Door.

Birds
Birds fly around the world each day
and make the sky so bright
and it can leade us into seeing
a more proud and happier sight.
As birds go out by the lakes and shores
and swim to take a bath,
can always leade us into seeing
a more proud and Happier Path.
As birds fly around the sky each day
Seeking to raize and lift a feather,
can always leade us into seeing
a mark and change of weather.
As we walk along lifes road each day
Listening to birds around us talk,
can always leade our journey we take
Into a more Pleasant and Happier Walk.

Parents
Of all the years that's passed on by
and marked ahead a leade,
I open my heart and see the joy
My Parents left at Deed
My Parents were there no matter what
The time of night or day.
They always knew how to cheer me up
and exactly what to always say
The many things theyve done for me
Has brought me lone from heart
and made my life into a happier life
That's never felt broken apart
I hope my Parents life ahead for them
Will be happy in all they do
and certainly bring them joy and Love
Like they've brought to me sincerely grew.



Babys
A baby enters the world each day
With tender touch and feel,
and it can help us see through life
How a baby can make our life so real
As babys go through life each day
Forming a need of care and Duty
Will also leade us into seeing
A mark and change of Beauty
A baby is a pleasure to watch
When it first begins to walk,
and it can also spread nice pride
When it first begins to talk
As babys go through life each day
Letting those around it see wan to see
How much Love a baby can bring
and will make our hearts so Gentle
Warm and Free.

P.S. This is the poem I got the Editor's Choice Award for.  It was also printed in a book from the Library of Congress.



Love
Love in life can be so nice
If we show our needs and care
To those around who need it most
and find in ways to share
When we see lifes way of helping out and lift our hearts to need,
The Love we share with others around
Will be a trustful and Happier Deed
When we take our time of finding ways
To draw others close beside,
can always have nice ways of showing
Our Love with Feeling and Pride
Love can also be rememberede at times
When joined together at heart,
and made into a heppier life
That never shall be broken apart.




Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Ever wonder what travel was like in the 1800's across the U.S.?  Well, it wasn't easy.  Read this article from the National Park Service.   
   "The stage route between Fort Smith, Arkansas, and San Francisco, California, passed through only two real towns: Tucson and El Paso. One stretch of route had no settlements for 900 miles; another had no water for 75." 
         The Butterfield stage traveled through the rugged Guadalupes rain or shine.


Travel on these roads was broken by stays in inns like the Potts Inn.  What comfort and luxury travelers found at the Potts Inn after days and days of cross country travel in those conditions! 


Thursday, May 10, 2012

Arkansas Heritage Month

May is Arkansas Heritage Month

At the Potts Inn, May is a busy month!  We host several school tours during the month of May every year.  The largest groups, by far, come from here in Pottsville.  The teachers in the Pottsville School District recognize the significance of the museum, and bring their students every year for special tours.

The 4th grade does its "Potts Inn Day" every year.  This event has grown from a half-day tour of the museum to a full day of tours, and activities.  The fourth grade teachers, the museum staff and board, and the Pottsville Junior High history department coordinate the event every May. 

Eighth graders from Pottsville Junior High lead tours, in period costume, of the house and grounds, while the fourth graders and teachers enjoy the living history they provide.

This year, the theme for Arkansas Heritage Month is:  "Dreams and Determination: Arkansans at Work."  With that theme in mind, the fourth graders have researched 19th Century occupations.  Each student will portray an occupation from the 1800's in Arkansas on the day of the tours.  Some of the occupations include:  riverboat captain, blacksmith, teacher, preacher, seamstress, milliner, carpenter, trapper, tinkerer, peddler...

In addition to the tours enjoyed in the morning, the afternoon will be full of fantastic pioneer activities.  Here's a list of the activities:

Civil War Hospital re-enactment
Civil War Soldier re-enactment
quilt making (every student will make a quilt square)
Lincoln Logs
squaredancing
music
storytelling
snacks

All these activities are provided by volunteers from our community. The school wants to thank each and every one of our volunteers! 

These activities offer students in Pottsville a chance to learn by intergenerational, outdoor activities. The goal is to learn Arkansas History, yes, but in a way that stimulates the imagination and helps students appreciate their unique heritage here in Pottsville, Arkansas!

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Building Detectives

Today I accompanied several groups of 4th graders to the museum.  We never entered a building!  Instead, we used the "Be Building Detectives" lesson plan found at the Arkansas History Hub and found on the page to the right.  Submitted to the Arkansas History Hub by Emily Pennel, the lesson encourages students to investigate architecture.  Students were separated into groups and armed with pens and clipboards.  The lesson helped the students to pay particular attention to all the details of a particular architectural style. 

In addition to the investigation, students had fun peeking into the windows of the Potts Inn.  Many swore they saw plates move, portraits wink, and shadows move...  This was just enough to whet their appetites for their big tour in May when the Pottsville Jr. High 8th graders will lead the 4th graders on group tours through the museum.

My hope is that by investigating the architecture, students gained vocabulary and experience that will help them appreciate the architecture in their hometown!

Thank you, Emily Pennel, for a terrific activity in Arkansas History!

Thursday, March 15, 2012

March is Archeology Month in Arkansas

     It is a hot afternoon in 1541 as the Spaniards, led by Hernando DeSoto, cross through Arkansas.  They have been traveling for months, searching for gold and claiming land for the King of Spain as they travel.  They encounter some Native Americans: the Quapaw.  The Quapaw instruct them to make their way further west. 
     After two grueling years, the men are still scrabbling through brush, tall pine forests, and slogging through swamps.  Still they have found no gold.  They carry with them armor, weaponry, and the provisions of a military party.  They travel by foot and on horseback.  What items from this long-ago expedition have been recovered by modern archeologists?

     Imagine a young Cherokee boy as he passes through the Arkansas River Valley on his way to Indian Territory in Oklahoma.  It is the 1830's.  What would this boy carry with him?  What might he leave behind?

     The first European settlement west of the Mississippi was at Arkansas Post. From 1686 to 1763, the Post served as a French settlement and trading post.  The Post changed hands in the middle of the 18th Century, becoming briefly a Spanish holding and then went back to the French after the American Revolution.  Finally in 1803, when Louisiana Territory was purchased from the French, the Post became part of the United States.  In all those years, with settlers and Native Americans living and working near the Post, what kinds of artifacts would have been left behind? 

Archeologists work to solve these mysteries and many more.  Take a look at some archeology links:
Archeology State Parks
Raven's Dream (a story of Native American rock art)

    

     What will be left behind a century from now?  What "artifacts" will we leave for archeologists in the future?  Broken computer parts?  Wrecked cars?  Remnants from old shopping malls?  It's an interesting thought.  The next time you throw something away, consider it leaving evidence of your way of life.