Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Poore Farm Featured in The Quilter Magazine, 2013/14


The Poore Family Homestead Historic Farm Museum 
(the Poore Farm)
is Featured in the Dec. 2013 / Jan. 2014 edition of
The Quilter Magazine

A Trip to the Poore Farm
By
Patricia L. Cummings










About the Poore Museum: The Poore Farm Museum is a historic homestead / settlement portraying one family's life from the 1830's to the 1980s.  The house, barn and outbuildings are all in authentic condition and reflect their original use and era.   The feeling one gets when entering the homestead is to step back in time, to one that existed prior to rural electrification of the northern most regions of NH. Back a picnic basket and stay a spell. For more information please visit: www.PooreFarm.org.

Please help up preserve this collection by making a donation today, at:

http://PooreFarm.org/contribute.html


For updated information and hours please see:

Thank you.

Richard Johnsen, Executive Director
The Poore Family Foundation for North Country Conservancy 
Rick@PooreFamilyFoundation.org
603-237-5500
https://twitter.com/JCKPoore
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Poore-Family-Homestead-Historic-Farm-Museum/215019921866719


Friday, April 26, 2013

Poore Farm Named a 2013 “Best of New England – Editors’ Choice” Winner by Yankee Magazine...


The Poore Family Homestead Historic Farm Museum (the Poore Farm) Named a 2013 “Best of New England – Editors’ Choice” Winner by Yankee Magazine.  The Museum is 
also a “Top Event” in the Official NH Visitor’s Guide.



The Poore Family Homestead Historic Farm Museum has been recognized as a 2013 “Editor’s Choice” winner of the “Best Historic Homestead” in Yankee Magazine’s Travel Guide to New England, on the newsstands now.  This designation is awarded by Yankee’s editors and contributors who name select restaurants, lodgings, and attractions in New England to the exclusive list. For 37 years, Yankee Magazine’s Travel Guide to New England has been the most widely distributed and best-selling guide to the six-state region, providing readers with a comprehensive vacation-planning tool and daily references.


The Poore Family Foundation Board of Directors are very pleased and honored to receive the 2013 “Editor’s Choice” award for the “Best Historic Homestead” in all of NH, says Rick Johnsen, the Foundation’s Executive Director.
  







The Poore Foundation Board of Directors is again hard at work, along with friends, artisans and volunteers, making plans for this summer.  They hope that folks/families can stop by for our 19th annual Open Barn and Celebration this July 7.  We will be celebrating our founder’s day of birth.  Please join us for Kenneth’s 128th!  There will be free birthday cake, lemonade, music and more…  Along with the American Mountain Men and Harold Boydston again this year, Hope Manseau will also be on hand this year.  Hope will be demonstrating rug weaving on the Poore Family Floor loom, preparing wool, and spinning on a traditional spinning wheel.  Be ready to get involved, Hope will have you helping in the process and showing you how to make yarn on a drop spindle that you can make at home.  Hope will also be showing you how they made soap in the North Country, during the 1800's.  The Museum will also be open daily from June through September. Admission is by donation. 


For updated information and hours please see:

In the March/April edition of the Yankee Magazine, in a featured article about the Poore Farm Museum, “A Promise Kept”, Yankee editor, Mel Allen, said: “I found here on a back country road people who cared about an old farmer and what his way of live meant, who found a way to keep it from vanishing, from the land and from memory“.  Read the full story at: http://www.yankeemagazine.com/issues/2013-03/features/poore-family-farm.

“Every one of the 300-plus places we highlight contains an untold back story about someone striving for perfection, having a dream, and having a vision to make a difference, weather it’s a small artisan’s studio or a lobster-in-the-rough shack or dressed-up steakhouse on a tree-lined Boston street,” says Yankee’s editor, Mel Allen. “While if may be hard to create a business, the true challenge is in making it work, being good enough that it endures and brings people back. Those are the qualities we look for and reward then we say “Best of New England.”

Yankee Magazine’s May/June 2013 Travel Guide features 317 “Best of New England – Editor’s Choice” winners, which include the regions best attractions, food, dining, and lodging.  This special issue also names 1200 top events around the New England, and the Poore Farm’s Annual Open Barn and Celebration, on July 7, is ranked in the “Top 20 NH Events”.  More information at: www.YankeeMagazine.com

The Poore Farm Museum and its July7th Celebration is also listed in the “Top Events” of  “The Official 2013-2014 New Hampshire Visitors’ Guide”.  In this NH publication, in The Great North Woods section, the Poore Museum is one of the five “Arts, History and Culture” destinations listed for this region. For more information or to receive an official NH Visitor’s Guide, go to: www.VisitNH.gov.

About the Poore Museum: The Poore Farm Museum is a historic homestead / settlement portraying one family's life from the 1830's to the 1980s.  The house, barn and outbuildings are all in authentic condition and reflect their original use and era.   The feeling one gets when entering the homestead is to step back in time, to one that existed prior to rural electrification of the northern most regions of NH. Back a picnic basket and stay a spell. For more information please visit: www.PooreFarm.org.

About Yankee Magazine: Yankee Magazine was founded in 1935 and is based in Dublin, NH.  It is the only magazine devoted to New England through its coverage of travel, home, food, and featured stories. With an average circulation of 317,000 and a total audience of 1.7 million readers, it is published by Yankee Publishing Incorporated (YPI), a family-owned, independent magazine published.  YPI also owns the nation’s oldest continuous produced periodical, The Olds Farmers Almanac, and McLean Communications. More information a: www.YankeeMagazine.com/press.


Thank you.

Richard Johnsen, Executive Director
The Poore Family Foundation for North Country Conservancy 
Rick@PooreFamilyFoundation.org
603-237-5500
https://twitter.com/JCKPoore
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Poore-Family-Homestead-Historic-Farm-Museum/215019921866719







Saturday, February 16, 2013

Yankee Magazine

The Yankee Magazine Article About the Poore Farm.

Please be sure to pick up a copy of the March / April edition and read the whole magazine.

Read the Full Story

View the Yankee Magazine Slide Show 

"A Promise Kept"
by Mel Allen



View Yankee Magazine Slide Show

NH Union Leader

What the NH Union Leader Says about the Poore Farm in 2012,
http://www.unionleader.com/article/20120702/NEWHAMPSHIRE05/707029984
NH Union Leader news paper article ...
A celebration straight off the farm

By KRISTI GAROFALO
Special to the Union Leader


Visitors gathering at the Poore Family Homestead Historic Farm Museum in Stewartstown for the 18th annual Open Barn and Celebration were treated to authentic cowboy guitar music by Harold Boydston. The Poore Farm Homestead is a historic homestead chronicling one family's history from the 1830s to the 1980s. (KRISTI GAROFALO)

STEWARTSTOWN — There is a small but powerful time warp waiting to be discovered in the Great North Woods.


At the Poore Family Homestead Historic Farm Museum in Stewartstown, visitors are transported back to a time before electricity in the rural northernmost region of New Hampshire.


On Sunday, the museum celebrated the 127th birthday of J.C. Kenneth Poore, the last member of the Poore family and the founder of the Poore Family Foundation for North Country Conservancy, with the 18th annual Open Barn and Celebration.


Rick Johnsen, executive director of the Poore Family Foundation, said he got caught up with the history evident in every part of the Poore Family Homestead.


“I feel very lucky to be here,” he said, as he welcomed visitors to the birthday party and reminded them to have a piece of birthday cake. “It's tradition,” he told the group.


Dawn Franklin of Gray, Maine, vacations in the area every summer. She brought her 7-year-old daughter, Sophia, and her 2-year-old son, Evan, to the celebration.


“It's a great way for them to learn some history,” she said, watching as the two played with a hand water pump.


Visitors explored a typical trapper camp from the early 1800's and learned how early pioneers and trappers started campfires by watching demonstrations from Charlie Chalk and Jimmy Gilbert of the Great North Woods Party of American Mountain Men.


The men also demonstrated hatchet throwing and black powder rifle shooting, complete with a boom enjoyed by the kids.


“I've been doing this for a number of years,” Chalk said. “You really have to know and research the period, but we enjoy doing it as a hobby and it keeps the skills alive.”


Visitors also toured the barn and outbuildings with exhibits of the Poore family's farm equipment and household items such as letters, camping equipment and a loom used to weave carpets for the house.


Of course, the Poore family house was the centerpiece of the day. Built in 1825 by Moses Heath, the 100-acre farm was sold in 1832 to Job Poore.


The five-bedroom house never had indoor plumbing or electricity. Food was kept cool by storing it in a room built over a spring running under the house. The small house couldn't hold many visitors at once. While waiting in line, guests ate cake and listened to lively authentic cowboy and western music provided by Harold Boydston.


Debby Clark of Lebanon, Maine, and her granddaughters, Laura Fuller and Ayllana Holtby, were visiting her brother's camp in Colebrook and came for the day.


“My brother visited the farm last year and this year we arranged to have the whole family come up,” she said.


Andrew Zander visited the homestead earlier in the year with his school class, but didn't tour the house. 


“I really wanted to come again,” he said.


The tour of the house, led by Poore Family Foundation Director Linda Tillotson, gave timeworn glimpses into the Poore family's daily lives, such as the dresses worn by the women and Civil War-era letters written by members of the family.


The Poore Family Homestead Museum is open to the public from June through September. For more information, go to poorefamily.homestead.com or poorefarm.org



KRISTI GAROFALO
kgarofalo@newstote.com



American Profile Magazine

What the American Profile Magazine Said About the Poore Farm in 2004,
American Profile Magazine Article 
About the Poore Farm

"Tending the Family Farm" 
2004