Reminder: Winchester – a Frontier Town…with a Dash of the Wild West!

Lectures John Flood, director of Big Legends and a PHW board member, will soon regale us with unusual and lesser-known tales of bygone days in this spotlight of Winchester’s historic places, people, and events. Don’t miss this PHW Lunch and Learn Lecture – it is sure to be fascinating!

Date: Thursday, April 7, 2016
Time: Noon-1 PM
Place: June E. Jeffrey Education Center at OakCrest Companies, 126 N. Kent Street, Winchester, VA. The Education Center is at the upper parking lot, in the addition closest to the Winchester Star building.
Cost: Free!
RSVPs: Appreciated but not required.

Parking: There is no off-street parking available at OakCrest. On-street parking is limited and metered. We recommend utilizing the George Washington Autopark at 131 N. Kent St.

Questions? phwi@verizon.net or 540-667-3577

Around the Internet: Historic Exterior Paint Colors

Around the Internet ‘Tis the season to think about exterior repainting. While working on some upcoming PHW event activities, we came across the following online sources to see authentic paint chips and sample color schemes from the late Victorian era through the 1960s. Take a look and get inspired!

1. The Daily Bungalow Flickr account has not only advertising samples from kit house manufacturers, but also a few paint chip sample pages from the same catalogs. Be sure to check out their album tab to find the booklets of particular interest to your home’s age and style.

2. Retro Renovation has a blog post dedicated specifically to a Dupont flyer for painting your 1960s house. Check out the rest of their blog for other Midcentury Modern style restoration stories and product resources.

3. Ed Ferris posted on My Old House Online a link to a Lowe Brothers paint catalog (dated circa 1910). Be sure to read through the comments on his post at My Old House Online to see more discussion and links about the history of historic colors.

4. In the same vein is the collection of paint catalogs from the Building Technology Heritage Library at the Internet Archive. One in particular caught our eye: Practical Suggestions on Exterior Decoration published by John Lucas & Co. in 1898. There are currently over 300 pamphlets in this collection, all available for viewing online.

(But before you rush out to paint your house a new old color scheme, make sure you are not subject to exterior color approval in the Historic Winchester zoning overlay. Most color change applications can be handled through the Planning and Zoning Office by administrative approval. Find more information online or call the City at 667-1815 and ask for Planning and Zoning if you have questions.)

Friday Photos: Reruns from 1976

About 100 images have been added to the 1976 Architectural Inventory album at Flickr this week, including Sharp, Pall Mall, Peyton, Piccadilly, West Monmouth, West Leicester, North Kent, and West Germain Streets, Indian Alley, and West Fairfax Lane. Some are new, while most are transfers from the Picasa album of the same name. This addition puts us at about the halfway mark for the 1976 survey images. As usual, the new additions can be found at the end of the albums. Happy viewing!

118 Fairfax Lane

Around the Internet: A Quintet of Articles

Around the InternetEvery now and then we like to share links to articles and blogs that we’ve come across while keeping up with history and preservation news. This week, we’ve picked five interesting stories or topics that crossed our path to share with you.

1. First, Jessica Leigh Hester brings us the story of archeology in Victorian-era trash sites in England with Excavating Stories From Victorian-Era Trash Dumps from CityLab. From the article:

“By digging up part of a doll’s porcelain face, or a medicine bottle, [Tom Licence] can imagine how daughters spent their days, or what ailments afflicted the patriarch. ‘You can work out what sorts of illnesses they had, what sorts of luxuries they enjoyed,’ he tells CityLab. ‘You can match the objects to the people.'”

2. If you are traveling this weekend and you’d like to see some sights along the way, check out Eight Scenic Drives for Virginia History from Virginia’s Travel Blog.

3. Alicia Puglionesi investigates the fanciful faux histories and the role of the railroad in the proliferation of the peculiar Virginia attraction of “show caves” in The 19th Century ‘Show Caves’ That Became America’s First Tourist Traps at The Atlas. From the article:

“The discovery of these subterranean wonders in the 1800s spawned a genre of local lore and popular fiction–call it ‘the romance of the cave’–in which crystal caverns became theaters for passion and politics.”

4. Did you know the Metropolitan Museum of Art has made many of their publications free to read online or download? Visit their website metmuseum.org to search their publications by title, author, keyword, thematic category, and/or reading format.

5. Why does historic preservation matter? Emily Wynn interviews Christina Butler, Professor of Historic Preservation at the College of Charleston, about the hows and whys people become interested in – and passionate about – saving our buildings and our stories for future generations. From the article Preserving History May Be Our Biggest Asset at Odyssey:

“If we erase the palpable part of our history, the buildings that we have spent our lives in, we lose more than just materials and money. We lose tradition, culture, and a road map that our ancestors followed to get to where we are today and, in turn, we lose where we are going and why.”

Coming Soon: Two Historic Lectures on Winchester History

LecturesIf you were able to attend the Mount Hebron Cemetery App introduction, you may have already marked your calendar for Saturday, April 2, 2 PM at the Handley Library, 100 W. Piccadilly St., for the Winchester-Frederick County Historical Society’s Annual Meeting. Tim Youmans will speak about the development and history of the streets in Winchester, including the origins of their names. His research expanded Dr. Quarles’ earlier history to include over 500 named streets.

PHW will follow shortly after with our next Lunch and Lecture of 2016, “Winchester – a Frontier Town…with a Dash of the Wild West!” Presented by John Flood, Director of Big Legends, the lecture will cover five segments of unusual and lesser-known tales of bygone days in this spotlight of Winchester’s historic places, people, and events. The lecture will be held April 7, noon-1 PM at OakCrest Companies, 126 N. Kent St.

Friday Photos: Back to the Past Edition

PHW brings you over 350 photos for this week’s edition, with the bulk of the images coming from the 1976 Architectural Survey of Winchester (with the majority of those having been previously posted on Picasa). Along with the new additions, we have done some housekeeping and created a few new albums to capture previously uncategorized or unidentified photos. See below for a list of the new albums.

18 E. Clifford

PHW Events
Rose Hill at Featherbed Lane
PHW Tours
PHW Annual Meeting, 1978
Blues House
Germain Street
1976 Architectural Survey (approximately 1/3 of the 1976 survey photos at this time)

Coming This Weekend: St. Paddy’s Celtic Festival

ShamrockOld Town Winchester will celebrate the community’s Irish and Scottish roots with the first St. Paddy’s Celtic Festival in Old Town on Saturday, March 12, 2016 from noon to 9 p.m. These free events will take place inside several businesses and, weather permitting, on the Loudoun Street Mall.

Performances will be held inside the 50/50 Taphouse, Brewbaker’s, Bright Box and Union Jack. The events are free to the public, but space inside the venues is limited. A percentage of food and drink sales at the performance locations will benefit Habitat for Humanity of Winchester-Frederick County.

Learn more about this event, the performers, and the other activities taking place this Saturday at oldtownwinchesterva.com.

Friday Photos: Three Little Albums

We have three albums for you today that have been transferred to Flickr. They may be small in comparison to last week’s extravaganza, but these albums pack a concentrated punch of history.

Construction of the Winchester Towers

“Uncovering Your Hidden Gems” Photo Contest top entries, 2012.

Construction of the Winchester Towers, images tentatively dated from 1960-1961, probably taken by E.E. Bayliss, Jr.

Artifacts from the Samuel Noakes House, photographed before the silent auction in 2013.

We had a much smaller readership in 2013, so if you missed the backstory on some of the Noakes house silent auction items, you can read these following histories:
Rumford Baking Power
Winchester Coca-Cola Bottles
Bromo-Seltzer Bottles