Dover Historical Society Presents Annual Ice Cream Social This Sunday

The Dover Historical Society will hold its 2010 Ice Cream Social on Sunday July 11 from Noon to 4pm on the Grounds of the J.E. Reeves Home.  This year’s event is sponsored though a generous grant from the Dominion Foundation. The Dominion Foundation contributes more than $20 million annually to charities in the states where the company operates. Foundation grants are limited to tax-exempt organizations and support a variety of programs, such as food banks, homeless shelters, educational grants, cultural outreach programs in the performing arts, and land and habitat preservation.

This year’s event will feature food, entertainment, living history characters, tours of the Reeves Home, a car display, old time music, a tea room, cake walks every half an hour, and a bounce house and inflatable slide.  Entertainment will be provided by Fred and Louise Deetz, Musical Sojourners and Mellowtone.  The car display is organized by Walt Stockert and will feature a number of great classic cars.

There is no admission charge for this year’s Social, and tickets will be sold for all activities and food.  Tickets will be 25 cents each or five for $1.00.  All refreshments and games will be affordably priced with Ice Cream available for 5 tickets ($1.00) and kid’s games for only 1 ticket (25 cents).  Kids will have the opportunity to play tradition Ice Cream Social games like ring toss, clothespin drop, Penny drop, egg on a spoon and duck pond.  By playing games the children can earn tokens that may be traded for prizes at our prize table.

Please make plans to join us on Sunday July 11th from noon to 4pm for this great family friendly event on the beautiful grounds of the J.E. Reeves Home and Museum.

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Berry Yourself in Vera Bradley This Saturday

Dutch Valley Gifts in Sugarcreek will be having a Vera Bradley Extravaganza called “Berry Yourself in Vera Bradley” on July 10, 2010, from 9:00am to 8:00pm.

Activities will include: a variety of refreshments including food and beverages, a free gift with the purchase of a Vera Bradley piece, prize drawings for, but not exclusive to, items in the new Very Berry Paisley pattern, opportunities to win hourly by playing Vera Trivial Pursuit, Fall 2010 Product Previews, and great specials and discounts on Vera Bradley items. There is no cost to attend this event and registration is not required.

Dutch Valley Gifts is located on the Dutch Valley Campus just off State Route 39 in Sugarcreek.

For more information call Dutch Valley Gifts at 330-852-4926 or visit http://www.dhgroup.com/en/sc/sc-calendar.php

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Zoar Art and Artists Return to Village on July 10

Zoar has long been a mecca for artists.  Attracted to Zoar’s tranquil beauty and Old World charm, artists, both amateur and professional, brought canvas, paint and paper to capture Zoar’s German flavor.

Young boys from the village of Zoar used to earn forbidden pocket change by carrying the artist’s equipment to the most beautiful and picturesque vantage points around the village.

After the communal Society of Separatists of Zoar dissolved in 1898, a few homeowners rented out second floors and attic space to artists to use as studios during the summers.  The former Girl’s Dormitory was converted into artists’ studios with the addition of large dormer windows on the second floor.  This building, which was located on the southeast corner of Third and Foltz Streets, no longer exists.

On Saturday, July 10th from 11:00 am to 2:00 pm, Zoar Village will bring back this tradition by featuring several area artists who will be demonstrating and displaying their work in and around the Historic Zoar Village.

Don Weisgarber a local area watercolor artist from Beach City, Ohio, will display his original art work at the Zoar Store.  Don specializes in Ohio landscapes and buildings and will be demonstrating his watercolor techniques.  Rosemary Tope, another local area artist from Bolivar, Ohio, specializes in pastel drawings.  Rosemary will be located around the village of Zoar demonstrating her art.  Karen Thornton of “Pottery by Design,” will display her ceramics inside the Zoar Store.  Karen,  a talented area artist who resides in Zoar, designs and creates handmade stoneware pottery.  Kim  Klingaman, a juried artist for Early American Life Magazine will be at the Zoar Store with samples of her Penny Rug Art.  Kim and her daughter Kris have a shop in Zoar called Springhouse Primitives and make fine needlework art from wool.  Kim is offering a class on Penny Rugs on July 31 and August 28.  The August 28 class will include and feature lunch in the Historic Zoar Dining room.  Author of the book “The Ghosts of Zoar”, Betty O’Neill Roderick will be available at the Zoar Store from 11:00 to 1:00 for a book signing.  The book about ghosts past and present in Zoar, has inspired a mystery film about Zoar which is scheduled to be filmed in September of this year.

The Zoar Community Association was founded in 1967 and strives to ensure the preservation of the historical characteristics and heritage of the Village of Zoar, Ohio, and the surrounding area, including Northern Tuscarawas County. Effective January 4, 2010, the Zoar Community Association assumed management of Zoar Village State Memorial under contract from the Ohio Historical Society.

Zoar Village was founded in 1817 by a group of about 200 German Separatists seeking escape from religious persecution in their homeland. Today, Zoar is a community of approximately 75 homes built from 1817 until the present. Many of the original homes have been preserved or restored. Find out more by visiting www.zca.org.

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Special Engine Finds Permanent Home at Depot

It is not often that we have an opportunity to save a piece of history.

The Dennison Railroad Depot Museum is inviting rail aficionados to help them restore a historic steam engine which was abandoned and vandalized, and has patiently waited 11 years to have a permanent home and  be restored back to its glory.

Ownership of the engine has been in question for the past decade.  Finally the Fifth District Court of Appeals agreed with Tuscarawas County Common Pleas Court that the engine currently located at the Dennison Railroad Depot Museum can remain at the museum.

Chesapeake & Ohio Engine 2700 has lived quite a life.

The Chesapeake & Ohio Engine 2700It’s story begins during World War II when the C&O turned to the 2-8-4 wheel arrangement to handle the fast freight schedule demanded by the war and built a series of engines they named “Kanawhas” after the Kanawah River which paralleled the C & O main line.

Between 1943 and 1947, the C & O purchased ninety, Class K-4, 2-8-4 “Kanawhas”, twenty from the Lima Locomotive Works and seventy from the American Locomotive Company. These locomotives were numbered 2700 through 2789. All of these locomotives had 69″ diameter drivers, 26″ x 34″ cylinders, a 245 psi boiler pressure, they exerted 69,350 pounds of tractive effort and each weighed about 292,500 pounds.

The very first steam locomotive in the Kanawha series was Dennison’s 2700.   Only fourteen K-4 Engines were built by the C & O in 1943, and they were numbered 2700 through 2713.

By mid 1952, the C & O had received enough diesels that it began to retire even the “Kanawhas”, which still had service time, and by 1957 all were retired. All but the thirteen that were donated to various cities were scrapped by May 1961, putting the 2700 into an elite group.

The remaining engines include: 2705 on display at the B&O Railroad Museum in Baltimore, MD, the 2707 on display at the Illinois Railway Museum in Union, IL , the 2716 owned by the Kentucky Railway Museum in New Haven, KY, the 2727 on display at the Museum of Transportation in St. Louis, MO, the 2732 on display at the Science Museum of Virginia in Richmond, the 2736 on display at the National Railroad Museum in Green Bay, WI., the 2755 on display in Chief Logan State Park, Logan, WV, the 2756 is on display in Huntington Park adjacent to the War Memorial Museum  in Newport News, VA, the 2760 on display in Riverside Park in Lynchburg, VA, the 2776 on display in Jesse Eyman Park in Washington Court House, OH and the 2789 restored at the Hoosier Valley Railroad Museum in North Judson, IN.

The City of Buffalo, NY received number 2701 and placed it on display near the waterfront where vandals wrecked it and it was scrapped. There are twelve surviving C&O 2-8-4 “Kanawha” type locomotives.

For many years, 2700 was displayed in Coonskin Park in Charleston, WV where it was neglected and vandalized. The area where 2700 was displayed was adjacent to the B&O line that ran from Charleston to Sutton. In the early 1970s, the St. Albans Fire Department restored and moved 2700 to St. Albans, WV. When 2700 was moved, it was pulled along this same line to the mainline of the NYC and up river cross the Kanawha at Deep Water approximately 45 miles east of Charleston. It was then brought back down the C&O mainline to St. Albans.

In 1986, the engine was brought to Ohio by S.T.E.A.M., the Silver Throttle Engine Association Museum in Canton Ohio, who had plans to restore the engine.  The engine stood for years on the Esber Beverage siding by Timken.   Parts were stripped from the engine in the process and many never returned.

Abandoned and on a spur that was to be disconnected by the Wheeling & Lake Erie, the engine was going to move to either the scrap yards or somewhere else.  The Dennison Railroad Depot Museum, with the help of the W & LE and Ohio Central Railroad, moved the engine to Dennison.  In May of 2009, the Dennison Depot went to court to win ownership.  They won the case and the following appeal.

Today, the 2700 proudly stands at its permanent home located at the Dennison Railroad Museum in Dennison, OH, in front of a passenger train which is actually a wing to the Museum.  She is considered to be one of the most stripped engines in the country, completely stripped of all the gauges, valves, name plates, windows, bell, and whistle.  Some of her parts are in safe storage and are expected to be recovered soon.  Others are lost forever.

It is the Museum’s plan to cosmetically restore the engine, and if funds are ever available in the future, to fully restore her to working order.  Anyone with original parts to the engine are encouraged to contact the Museum.

The Museum invites folks to help with the restoration by contributing $27.00 to her restoration campaign.  July 27 has been designated “Engine 2700 Day”, where cake will be served to celebrate the engine’s permanent home and the first 100 donors will receive a collector’s print of the Engine.

Donations can be sent to:  “Restore Engine 2700”, c/o The Dennison Railroad Depot Museum, P.O. Box 11, 400 Center Street, Dennison, Ohio, 44621.  For more information, contact Wendy Zucal at the Museum, toll fre3 877-278-8020, www.dennisondepot.org, director@dennisondepot.org.

Dennison is located halfway between Pittsburgh and Columbus on what was once the famed Panhandle Line of the Pennsylvania Railroad and part of the strategic national defense route.  Dennison is known as “Dreamsville USA”, a nickname it received during the forties for its Servicemen’s Canteen that served 1.5 million soldiers, 13% of all armed personnel.  The Depot is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is currently nominated as a National Landmark in the Home front Category.

The Museum is open year round Tuesday through Sunday with a restaurant, gift shop and static rolling stock including a rare WWII Hospital Car, Caboose and more.  A full calendar of events includes Polar Express in December and the American Soldiers Homecoming Festival every August.

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Under the Zoar Sun: Enjoy a Tuscan-style Evening with the ZCA

ZOAR- Fans of good food, wine and socializing with friends in a unique setting will want to visit Zoar July 24th.  “Under the Zoar Sun” will feature heavy appetizers prepared by Zoar resident Chef Michael Smith of Trax Diner along with a variety of wines.

“This is not your everyday wine-tasting or progressive dinner. Visitors will first start at the Zoar Store and then wander through the village visiting historic cellars where appetizers and a selection of wine will be served,” said Zoar Community Association President Jon Elsasser.  “This unique approach also gives us the opportunity to get visitors into some very unique areas of the historic buildings in the village. Something they wouldn’t be able to do otherwise.”

The event runs from 6-9 PM and concludes in the historic Zoar Garden where dessert and wine will be served with live entertainment – under the setting Zoar sun.   Revenues generated from “Under the Zoar Sun” will benefit the maintenance and upkeep of the village’s Number One house.

For details about the event, contact Zoar Community Association at 330-874-3011 or email sitemanager@zca.org.

Founded in 1967, the Zoar Community Association strives to ensure the preservation of the historical characteristics and heritage of the Village of Zoar, Ohio, and the surrounding area, including Northern Tuscarawas County. Effective January 4, 2010, the Zoar Community Association assumed management of Zoar Village State Memorial under contract from the Ohio Historical Society.

Zoar Village was founded in 1817 by a group of about 200 German Separatists seeking escape from religious persecution in their homeland. Today, Zoar is a community of approximately 75 homes built from 1817 until the present. Many of the original homes have been preserved or restored. Find out more by visiting www.zca.org.

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Tuscarawas County…A Mural History

Central Catholic High School Students Danni Moore (sitting) and Spencer Thomakos put the finishing touches on “Tuscarawas County…a Mural History” in readiness for the unveiling, Friday June 18th at 6:30.

Museum Acrylics of New Philadelphia will “uncover” the newest attraction to the county on Friday, June 18 at 6:30 PM.  The 32 foot mural depicting events, attractions and legends of the county will be unveiled with the help of local history and attraction representatives.  The building, located at 160 First Drive NW will feature the mural on the Fair Ave side, and was painted by the art students at Tuscarawas Central Catholic High School.  This art project, under the guidance of teacher Gene Troyer, was completely conceived, researched, laid out and painted by eight students, some coming back after graduation to complete their work.  Some of the work on the mural includes Woody Hayes, Simon Girty, the Dennison Railroad Depot, Fort Laurens State Memorial, Canal history and agriculture, to name a few of the subjects.

The event is open to the public and will include refreshments.

Museum Acrylics is a 15 year old company specializing in vitrine manufacturing and acrylic fabrication for museums across the nation.  Work by the company includes the Smithsonian in Washington DC., the Oklahoma City National Memorial and Monument, Women’s Air and Space Museum in Cleveland, Dennison Railroad Depot Museum in Dennison and Gnadenhutten Museum and Monument in Gnadenhutten.

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Help Zoar’s Historic Garden Maintain Excellence

Do you enjoy gardening?  Or just being outside to enjoy the sights and sounds of summer? Maybe you have a group or company that participates in community service projects?  If so, we’ve got the perfect project for you.  Adopt one of the 32 garden plots in the Historic Zoar Gardens.  The adoption process requires no monetary donation or payment, just your time and a little tender-loving-care. Each plot needs to be checked 2-3 times a month for weeds, light pruning if necessary, and adding a little mulch as needed. All of the heavy work has been completed and light upkeep and maintenance is now needed. Continue reading

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Zoar to Host Civil War Quilting Class

The Zoar Community Association is pleased to announce a Civil War Tribute quilting class, which will be taught by Helen Young, an experienced quilter and one of our Zoar Volunteers. The class will be held in the historic Sewing House on June 11 and 12.  Contact ZCA at 330-874-3011 for reservations and class times for this unique opportunity for quilting enthusiasts.

The Civil War Tribute quilt is a Homestead Hearth original design with Civil War Reproduction fabrics designed by Judie Rothermel for Marcus Fabrics.  A beautiful 100″ x 112″ quilt based on classic quilt blocks and variations with beautiful details commemorating the 150-year anniversary of the American Civil War in 2011. The quilt highlights a variety of saw tooth and star blocks, each of which represents a major battle fought during the war. Continue reading

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Wedding Gifts at Warther Carvings

June is just around the corner and with the change in months comes one of the busiest times of the year for weddings. For those invited to weddings and bridal showers, finding a unique gift for the couple is often hard to find among the big box superstores where many couples register. The answer for a unique, long lasting gift? The Warther Carvings Gift Shop in Dover, Ohio.

When you mention Warther’s to most people, the first thought is of “Mooney” Warther’s famous train carvings, which are a spectacular sight, but another gem of the Warther family is the handcrafted kitchen cutlery made on site. Continue reading

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Garden Tours Planned at Reeves Home

Have you ever driven past the J.E. Reeves Home and Museum and admired the beautiful grounds?  Are you curious about the flowers and interested in learning more?  If so, we have the program for you.  On Sunday May 16, 2010, the Dover Historical Society will present the first in a series of Garden Tours on the grounds of the J.E. Reeves Home.  The tours will be conducted by the Reeves Home’s gardener, Renee Leetch.

The May tour will commence at the Carriage House and feature the many spring blooming plants included in the landscape of the Reeves Home.  Renee will present an informative talk featuring growing information, history and folklore.  Additional tours will focus on topics like roses, fall gardening and prepping for winter, and the Victorian language of flowers.  This series will be held the third Sunday of the month from May through October.

There is no charge to attend the tours although donations will be accepted to help offset the cost of keeping the grounds beautiful.  The tour begins promptly at 1:30pm on May 16th, in front of the Carriage House.  In the event of rain, the May Garden tour will be pushed back to May 23rd.  Please make plans to join us for this exciting new program whether you are a seasoned gardener, beginner, or just curious about the fascinating history behind the plants we see every day.

For additional information, please contact the Dover Historical Society at (330)343-7040.

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