Thursday, July 31, 2008

Say It Right

Busy Days...
Thursday, we had a lot of visitors. We started by working in the cotton mill. We were making dishtowels and our job was to make sure the rose print was on each one. Here is the company logo...Mom, you should like this one. There were so many rules. The assembly line worked well until they cut our wages and then laid off some workers! We were ready to sign the petition for a 10 hour work day and they blacklisted some of us! Later in the day, an actress gave a great performance of three different mill girls. One was telling all the benefits of being away from the farm and in the factory, another was Sarah Bagley (a blacklisted worker fighting for a 10 hour workday), and the last was an Irish girl trying desperately to make enough money to get the rest of her family to America. The actress was amazing and put on a great show. She really involved the audience and portrayed her characters well. It was obvious she had done a lot of research on each girl. She didn't allow photos...
The mill is very dangerous...girls (mostly) are working at a feverish pace with little break time. The air in the factory is unhealthy and the girls are overworked. This is a replica of the Boott Mill where I am. It has five floors...all run by the power of water wheels. This is what it really looks like. This is our director, Sheila.

Doesn't she look like Ellen DeGeneres? Really, Really she does. She even has the mannerisms of Ellen.

Today (Friday), we were off to look at interesting things. We got on the bus at 8:45 and headed to the cemetery. We stopped first to walk down this path to see the waterfall that helps power the Boott Mill and others. The path was thick with poison ivy and people were pointing it out all over. It was pretty scary....the ivy, not the falls.

At the cemetery, we were looking for the grave of Barilla Taylor. She was a mill girl who came to the mills to work at age 16. She was one of 12 children and her parents needed the money. She was the fourth oldest. Barilla died at age 17...probably of typhoid. We found the grave marker.

Our next stop was at the OLD MANSE in Concord, the home of Reverend Emerson. Ralph Waldo Emerson did some of his writing here. It is also the site of the Old North Bridge (of Revolutionary War fame). Here I am at the site of the ONB.
Our last stop was at Walden Pond. This is the site of Henry David Thoreau (pronounced THOROUGH...or thorrrro -like "he did a Thorough job"). Most people pronounce it wrong. I did. Walden Pond is were Thoreau wrote WALDEN and and CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE to name a few things. He did his writing in a little cabin in the woods. It is really a little cabin. This is a model of the cabin and the next picture is of the actual place where the cabin was (deep in the woods).He built it himself and lived mostly off the land. He lived there for 2 years, 2 months and 2 days. He surveyed this pond and found that at its deepest point it is 103 feet deep. When actual surveyors checked out the pond, they found out he was pretty correct.
He wrote CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE when he was asked to pay a poll tax. He refused and was jailed. So, he is a role model for Gandhi and MKL, Jr. When we returned to the model of his home, Mr. Thoreau was there. He took our questions and my question to him was "If you could sit down to a meal with the President, what would you say?" He informed me that he would never sit down with the President. He disliked the President and all politics. He was not to crazy about the women's movement either. He was pretty full of himself. At the site of his real house, people have left rocks. I found this one and it pretty much sums up my summer. Thanks for tagging along on my historical adventures.

1 comment:

steven prevo said...

Thanks for letting us travel through your experiences all over the globe this summer. I have never been to many of these places, but feel as if I was there with you. What a great summer. Too bad all good things must come to an end. Hope to see you in the new school year. Barb.