Welcome!

Greetings fellow historians and local history enthusiasts...welcome to the Pioneer Valley History Network's blog. You will find postings here that range from exhibit reviews to comments about life in a small museum. This is a forum to share thoughts and ideas, collaborate on events and ask advice from our neighbors throughout the Pioneer Valley. We hope you will take the time to explore our blog and add to it with both comments and postings.

If you are interested in submitting a piece to our site, please see the tab "Our Contributors" for more information.

For more information about PVHN and an events calendar for the region, please visit our website: PVHN.wordpress.com

In the meantime...enjoy!

Saturday, July 28, 2012

Locating Final Resting Places and Viewing Images Online

By Barbara Pelissier, Westhampton Historical Society 

Discovering as much information as possible about the person you are researching generally includes finding a final resting place.  Whether compiling documents of your town’s veterans or researching your own personal genealogy, an accompanying image of a headstone and the location of the cemetery helps to round out a good search.  Thanks to the legwork of countless passionate volunteers, cemeteries from Hampshire County to Zimbabwe (yes, Zimbabwe!) have been photographed and indexed at www.findagrave.com.  Best of all, the results are available online at no cost. You don’t have to travel to the other side of the country or wait impatiently for the snow to melt in a Vermont graveyard to see your ancestor’s headstone.

Chances are good that you’ll find even the oldest ‘hidden’ cemeteries have been digitally cataloged, photographed and posted online.  One fine example is the headstone of Ramsford Avery and his wife Polly, shown here:

http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GScid=2329244&GRid=51785916&. 



This stone stands in a remote cemetery on a steep hillside along a sparsely populated road in Hampshire County, Massachusetts.  But the Averys are not alone in their resting place…a total of 93 headstones have been photographed and cataloged on the website, as well as photos of the cemetery itself and driving directions.

For those who don’t drive or are physically unable to scramble up that hill, www.findagrave.com is simply invaluable.  Individuals who cannot physically navigate a cemetery can successfully navigate www.findagrave.com. You can view every stone in that cemetery or visit cemeteries thousands of miles away without spending a single cent on gas. Leave your bathrobe and slippers on and virtually stroll through the graveyards at midnight, if you like.  These gates don’t close at dark!

Friday, July 27, 2012

The Emperor’s Toy Soldiers: China’s Terra Cotta Warriors


By Cliff McCarthy, Museum of Springfield History


Zheng was only thirteen when, in 246 BC, he became King of Qin, the westernmost state of China.  By his thirty-eighth year, he had achieved what no other warlord before him had done -- he had conquered and unified all of the "warring states" of China, proclaiming himself Qin Shihuangdi, the Great August First Emperor of Qin.  Although successful in this life, the First Emperor greatly feared his own death.  If he could not conquer his own mortality, he could at least create for himself a comfortable afterlife filled with his treasures and riches.  And so, to guard his tomb, the First Emperor produced one of the world's most amazing wonders -- a military force of life-size, terra cotta warriors.

Numbering between 6 and 8 thousand, each figure is unique, averaging about 6 feet tall and weighing around 500 pounds.  There are infantryman, archers, charioteers, and cavalrymen, each with the sculpted face of an individual.  They wear their hair in different styles, sometimes with headdresses indicating social rank.

A comfortable afterlife requires more than just an army and so the First Emperor also brought with him entertainers -- acrobats, strongmen, and musicians -- to accompany him.  He  must have expected some level of red tape in the next world, because he brought "civil authorities" with him, as well.

All this was discovered by chance by some peasant farmers in 1974.  Since then, these treasures have been the subject of massive archeological digs, revealing new finds and opening a window into a culture more than 2000 thousand years old. Some of the figures have made limited tours of the world's major cities and they are now on display in New York City at the Discovery Museum on 44th Street.  While not within the bounds of the Pioneer Valley, this exhibit is so extraordinary, and the figures so magnificent, that it merits special consideration for Valley residents looking for an amazing museum experience.

Actually, the Discovery Museum is easily accessible.  It is about a ten-block walk from Penn. Station, so the intrepid Valley adventurer can take Amtrak out of Springfield and return the same day, without the hassle of driving or parking in the city.  The exhibit runs until August 26th.  For more information, go to: www.discoverytsx.com

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Introduction

Hello! Welcome to the Pioneer Valley History Network blog.


Our mission is to promote and provide effective communication and collaboration among the historical societies, sites, and museums of the Pioneer Valley and to foster a public appreciation for, and awareness of, such repositories of history.


This is a site where we can share our stories, ask questions and talk about exhibits currently going on in the Valley.